Geographies of empire: Infrastructure and agricultural intensification in Haiti

IF 3.6 3区 社会学 Q1 GEOGRAPHY Geographical Journal Pub Date : 2022-12-24 DOI:10.1111/geoj.12506
Sophie Sapp Moore, Victoria Koski-Karell
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

The implementation of US-backed agricultural initiatives under what became known as the Green Revolution (1945–1970) reshaped populations, ecologies, and landscapes worldwide. While most investigations into the implications of this era focus on the development of intensive farming in places such as Mexico, India, and the Philippines, few offer critical analysis of its Caribbean manifestations. This paper examines the role of the Green Revolution in the production of environmental injustice in Haiti. Historically, we situate Green Revolution technopolitics in a broader trajectory of US-led imperial and neoliberal interventions that spans from the Occupation of Haiti (1915–1934) to the 21st century. We draw from our long-term ethnographic research to show how Green Revolution transformations impact agrarian life in Haiti's lower Artibonite Valley and Central Plateau today. Integral to the Occupation were efforts to (re)establish production of export commodities. We demonstrate how such attempts, regardless of outcome, generated indelible material, social, and ecological entanglements that served to intensify empire. In 1949, the US and Haitian governments established an agency tasked with extending Occupation-era irrigation infrastructure throughout the Artibonite Valley. After these efforts stalled, 1970s interventionists sought different inroads for increasing agricultural production, particularly of rice. Their initiatives paved the way for post-2010 ventures that perpetuate many of the same consequences, including hunger, economic insecurity, and environmental degradation. We show how the history of imperial intervention in Haiti created the conditions for the ongoing production of environmental injustice through agrarian reform. Ultimately, we argue that the Green Revolution transformed Haiti's agrarian geographies in ways that intensified environmental harms and advanced a project of US empire that continues to shape Haiti today. We examine the contemporary implications of this century of transformation for farmers, who carry on a legacy of agrarian justice that has contested the project of the Green Revolution since its inception.

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帝国地理:海地的基础设施和农业集约化
美国支持的农业倡议的实施被称为绿色革命(1945-1970),重塑了世界范围内的人口、生态和景观。虽然对这一时代影响的大多数调查都集中在墨西哥、印度和菲律宾等地集约化农业的发展上,但很少有人对其在加勒比地区的表现进行批判性分析。本文考察了绿色革命在海地环境不公产生中的作用。从历史上看,我们将绿色革命技术政治置于美国领导的帝国主义和新自由主义干预的更广泛的轨迹中,从占领海地(1915-1934)到21世纪。我们从长期的民族志研究中得出结论,展示绿色革命的变革如何影响海地阿蒂博尼特河谷下游和中央高原的农业生活。占领的组成部分是努力(重新)建立出口商品的生产。我们展示了这样的尝试,无论结果如何,都产生了不可磨灭的物质、社会和生态纠葛,从而强化了帝国。1949年,美国和海地政府成立了一个机构,负责在整个阿蒂博尼特山谷扩展占领时期的灌溉基础设施。在这些努力停滞之后,20世纪70年代的干预主义者寻求不同的途径来增加农业生产,特别是大米生产。他们的倡议为2010年后的冒险铺平了道路,这些冒险使许多同样的后果长期存在,包括饥饿、经济不安全和环境退化。我们展示了帝国对海地的干预历史如何通过土地改革为正在产生的环境不公正创造了条件。最后,我们认为,绿色革命改变了海地的农业地理,加剧了环境危害,并推进了美帝国的项目,继续塑造今天的海地。我们考察了本世纪转型对农民的当代影响,他们继承了土地正义的遗产,从一开始就对绿色革命的项目提出了质疑。
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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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