From the plantation to the deep blue sea: Naturalising debt, ordinary disasters, and postplantation ecologies in the Caribbean

IF 3.6 3区 社会学 Q1 GEOGRAPHY Geographical Journal Pub Date : 2022-08-01 DOI:10.1111/geoj.12470
Keston K. Perry
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Abstract

This paper critically assesses debt as a response to ecological, fiscal, and climate disasters that have emerged within the ‘blue economy’ agenda in the Caribbean. Caribbean countries routinely suffer major losses of life, internal social and economic displacement, increased debt burdens, and significant economic damages due to hurricanes and ecological disasters in the context of an ongoing fiscal crisis. In response, regional public and national agencies have proposed ‘blue economy’ initiatives to address the regional need for finance, to rejuvenate financial flows, and to compensate for extremely constrained fiscal resources and externally imposed austerity (or debt bondage). Major recent hurricanes and ecological shocks illustrate uneven and interconnected spatial histories of anti-Black dispossession, disenfranchisement, and deprivation, offering important empirical terrain from which to appreciate how contemporary ‘disasters’ have become new means to extend hierarchical plantation formations to the seascape through debt-driven finance and austerity. The paper demonstrates the ways in which coercive financial instruments like catastrophe insurance, debt swaps, ‘blue bonds’, and traditional public debt constitute tools to further integrate these societies differentially into racialised financial geographies and entrench a coloniality of being. As traditional plantation structures become exhausted and lack capacity to effectively ensure growth, these innovative finance mechanisms are required for ‘blue’ accumulation. We situate spiralling debt burdens and these new instruments spurred by socially produced and postcolonial disasters within postplantation ecologies that describe socio-political relations and spatial dependencies linked to interwoven logics of disaster-based financial capitalism that seek to extend the extractive capacity of the plantation anew. These arrangements tend to naturalise and render disaster, death, and debt as ordinary events and obligations arising from postcolonial statehood, and take for granted their origins in racialised plantation structures.

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从种植园到深海:加勒比地区的归化债务、普通灾难和种植园后生态
本文批判性地评估了债务作为对加勒比地区“蓝色经济”议程中出现的生态、财政和气候灾难的回应。加勒比国家经常遭受重大的生命损失、内部社会和经济流离失所、债务负担增加以及在持续的财政危机背景下因飓风和生态灾害造成的重大经济损失。作为回应,区域公共和国家机构提出了“蓝色经济”倡议,以解决区域对资金的需求,恢复资金流动,并弥补财政资源极度受限和外部强加的紧缩(或债务束缚)。最近的主要飓风和生态冲击说明了反黑人剥夺、剥夺公民权和剥夺的不平衡和相互关联的空间历史,提供了重要的经验领域,从中可以了解当代“灾难”如何成为通过债务驱动的金融和紧缩将分层种植园结构扩展到海景的新手段。本文展示了强制性金融工具(如巨灾保险、债务互换、“蓝色债券”和传统公共债务)如何构成工具,以进一步将这些社会以不同的方式整合到种族化的金融地理中,并巩固存在的殖民性。由于传统的种植园结构已经枯竭,缺乏有效确保增长的能力,因此需要这些创新的融资机制来进行“蓝色”积累。我们将不断上升的债务负担和这些由社会产生的后殖民灾难刺激的新工具置于后种植园生态中,这些生态描述了社会政治关系和空间依赖关系,这些关系和空间依赖关系与基于灾难的金融资本主义的相互交织的逻辑有关,这些逻辑寻求重新扩展种植园的采掘能力。这些安排倾向于将灾难、死亡和债务归化,并将其视为后殖民国家产生的普通事件和义务,并理所当然地认为它们起源于种族化的种植园结构。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
3.30%
发文量
69
期刊介绍: The Geographical Journal has been the academic journal of the Royal Geographical Society, under the terms of the Royal Charter, since 1893. It publishes papers from across the entire subject of geography, with particular reference to public debates, policy-orientated agendas.
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