{"title":"Be(y)on(d) the map: Collaboratively activating Geographies of (De)CO2loniality/H2Ope in the Ecuadorian Chocó borderlands","authors":"Julianne A Hazlewood","doi":"10.1177/25148486231182994","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This article is positioned within the Chocó borderlands of Ecuador and Colombia. I delve into the historical and contemporary everyday struggles of two communities within the Santiago-Cayapas Watershed—the Afro-descendant community of La Chiquita and the Awá Indigenous community of Guadualito. Yet, I also discuss the methodological aspects of “us-formation”: the multi-dimensional trials and tribulations of a collective quest for justice. The goal: to situate their largely invisibilized 20+ years of legal struggles against two oil palm companies ‘on the map' and demand reparations. The oil palm companies violate Human Rights and Nature's Rights by contaminating rivers and destroying the sustenance of ancestral communities’ lives. Through honing into the entanglements of collaboratively activating five dimensions of Geographies of Hope-in-Praxis—place, alliances, the (un)thinkable, perseverance/resilience, and the (im)possible—the paper traverses a multi-dimensional journey-destination of interdependent processes: 1) (De)CO 2 loniality: decolonizing research, “official” versions of history, and now, “climate change mitigation development”, that attempt to silence and choke out Indigenous and ancestral peoples and territories; and 2) H 2 Ope: carving out new relational spaces bound together by establishing networks to revindicate human/ancestral rights to water and the rights of La Chiquita River. Geographizing hope reveals that the route toward hope-with-justice is a nonlinear, constantly shifting, unpredictable pluriverse of possibilities ripe for action.","PeriodicalId":11723,"journal":{"name":"Environment and Planning. E, Nature and Space","volume":"181 1","pages":"1463 - 1500"},"PeriodicalIF":3.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-07-25","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Environment and Planning. E, Nature and Space","FirstCategoryId":"90","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1177/25148486231182994","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
This article is positioned within the Chocó borderlands of Ecuador and Colombia. I delve into the historical and contemporary everyday struggles of two communities within the Santiago-Cayapas Watershed—the Afro-descendant community of La Chiquita and the Awá Indigenous community of Guadualito. Yet, I also discuss the methodological aspects of “us-formation”: the multi-dimensional trials and tribulations of a collective quest for justice. The goal: to situate their largely invisibilized 20+ years of legal struggles against two oil palm companies ‘on the map' and demand reparations. The oil palm companies violate Human Rights and Nature's Rights by contaminating rivers and destroying the sustenance of ancestral communities’ lives. Through honing into the entanglements of collaboratively activating five dimensions of Geographies of Hope-in-Praxis—place, alliances, the (un)thinkable, perseverance/resilience, and the (im)possible—the paper traverses a multi-dimensional journey-destination of interdependent processes: 1) (De)CO 2 loniality: decolonizing research, “official” versions of history, and now, “climate change mitigation development”, that attempt to silence and choke out Indigenous and ancestral peoples and territories; and 2) H 2 Ope: carving out new relational spaces bound together by establishing networks to revindicate human/ancestral rights to water and the rights of La Chiquita River. Geographizing hope reveals that the route toward hope-with-justice is a nonlinear, constantly shifting, unpredictable pluriverse of possibilities ripe for action.
本文位于厄瓜多尔和哥伦比亚的Chocó边境地带。我深入研究了圣地亚哥-卡亚帕斯分水岭内两个社区的历史和当代日常斗争——拉奇基塔的非洲后裔社区和瓜达瓦利托的土著社区。然而,我也讨论了“我们形成”的方法论方面:集体追求正义的多维考验和磨难。其目标是:将他们与两家油棕公司长达20多年的法律斗争(基本上不为人知)置于“地图上”,并要求赔偿。油棕公司污染河流,破坏祖先社区赖以生存的资源,违反了人权和自然权利。通过探究协作激活实践中希望地理学的五个维度——地点、联盟、(不可想象的)、毅力/弹性和(不可能的)——的纠缠,本文穿越了一个相互依存过程的多维旅程——目的地:1)(De) co2孤寂性;非殖民化研究、历史的"官方"版本,以及现在的"减缓气候变化发展",试图压制和扼杀土著和祖先人民和领土;2) H 2 Ope:通过建立网络,开辟新的关系空间,以重新表明人类/祖先对水和拉奇基塔河的权利的权利。对希望进行地理定位表明,通往正义的希望之路是一个非线性的、不断变化的、不可预测的、各种各样的可能性,这些可能性已经成熟,可以采取行动。