Swiss human geographies lecture 2019 tourism troubles: feminist political ecologies of land and body in Panama

Q2 Social Sciences Geographica Helvetica Pub Date : 2022-09-15 DOI:10.5194/gh-77-327-2022
S. Mollett
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Abstract. On the Panamanian Caribbean coast and the Bocas del Toro Archipelago, foreign direct investment via residential tourism development drives land displacement. As land insecurities grow, particularly for local Indigenous and Afro-Panamanian peoples, ongoing dispossession is not simply about land, but rather simultaneously about land, people and their bodies. In Bocas, foreign land enclosures are infused with imaginaries, which take for granted Black female servitude and Black landlessness. Such imaginaries seemingly lock economically “poor” Afro-Panamanian women into particular kinds of work. To illustrate, I entangle feminist political ecological assertions that struggles over nature are embodied struggles, with intersectional and relational understandings of land and body. To do so, I draw insights from postcolonial, decolonial and Black feminist critiques of coloniality and settler colonialism. Building from this literature, I seek to show how a logic of elimination operates within the legal geographies of residential tourism development. In doing so, I highlight the historical and contemporary ways in which Afro-Panamanian women are naturalized as criadas (maids), a process that accompanies land enclosure. Blending ethnographic and historical data collection, I seek to illuminate how Afro-Panamanian women's livelihood struggles reflect both their acquiescence to residential tourism development, and their resilience in the face of Bocas' anti-black patriarchal coloniality. Thus, I argue that Afro-Panamanian women's desires for inclusion and belonging in Bocas' tourism enclave – a project that seeks to eliminate Indigenous and Black relations to coastal lands and foster their embodied subjection to foreign nationals – simultaneously reflects their struggles for the right to remain on the coast.
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瑞士人文地理讲座2019旅游问题:巴拿马土地和身体的女权主义政治生态
摘要在巴拿马加勒比海岸和博卡斯德尔托罗群岛,通过住宅旅游开发的外国直接投资推动了土地置换。随着土地不安全状况的增加,特别是对当地的非洲裔巴拿马土著人民来说,持续的剥夺不仅涉及土地,而且同时涉及土地、人民和他们的身体。在博卡斯的作品中,外国对土地的侵占充满了想象,将黑人女性的奴役和黑人无地视为理所当然。这样的想象似乎将经济上“贫穷”的非裔巴拿马妇女锁定在特定的工作中。为了说明这一点,我将女权主义的政治生态主张,即对自然的斗争是具体化的斗争,以及对土地和身体的交叉和相互关系的理解,纠缠在一起。为此,我从后殖民主义、非殖民主义和黑人女权主义对殖民主义和定居者殖民主义的批评中汲取见解。从这些文献中,我试图展示消除的逻辑是如何在住宅旅游开发的法律地理范围内运作的。在此过程中,我强调了非洲裔巴拿马妇女入籍为criadas(女佣)的历史和当代方式,这是一个伴随着土地圈地的过程。结合民族志和历史数据收集,我试图阐明非洲裔巴拿马妇女的生计斗争如何反映了她们对住宅旅游发展的默许,以及她们在面对博卡斯反黑人父权殖民统治时的韧性。因此,我认为,非裔巴拿马妇女渴望融入Bocas的旅游飞地- -该项目旨在消除土著和黑人与沿海土地的关系,并促进他们对外国国民的具体服从- -同时反映了她们争取留在沿海的权利的斗争。
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来源期刊
Geographica Helvetica
Geographica Helvetica Social Sciences-Anthropology
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
46
审稿时长
53 weeks
期刊介绍: Geographica Helvetica, the Swiss journal of geography, publishes contributions in all fields of geography as well as in related neighbouring disciplines. It is a multi-lingual journal, accepting articles in the three main Swiss languages, German, French, and Italian, as well as in English. It invites theoretical as well as empirical contributions. The journal welcomes contributions that specifically deal with empirical questions relating to Switzerland. The agenda of Geographica Helvetica is related to the specificity of Swiss geography as a meeting ground for different geographical traditions and languages (German, French, Italian and, more recently, a type of transnational, mainly English-speaking geography). The journal aims to become an ideal platform for the development of an informed, creative, and truly cosmopolitan geography. The journal will therefore provide space for cross-border theoretical debates around major thinkers – past and present – and the circulation of geographical ideas and concepts across Europe and beyond. The journal seeks to be a platform of debate also through innovative publication formats in its section "Interfaces", which publishes shorter interventions: reflection pieces on major thinkers as well as position papers (see manuscript types). Geographica Helvetica is promoted and supported by the following institutions: Swiss Academy of Sciences (SCNAT), Geographic and Ethnological Society of Zurich/Geographisch-Ethnographische Gesellschaft Zürich (GEGZ), and Swiss Association of Geography/Association Suisse de Géographie (ASG).
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