转型中的灭绝:古柯、煤炭和哥伦比亚和平协定后环境中的敌意生产

IF 4.6 Q2 MATERIALS SCIENCE, BIOMATERIALS ACS Applied Bio Materials Pub Date : 2022-01-02 DOI:10.2458/jpe.4780
H. M. Martin, Oscar Pedraza
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在2015年的巴黎气候峰会上,时任哥伦比亚总统胡安·曼努埃尔·桑托斯提议建设一条从安第斯山脉延伸到巴西大西洋海岸的多国生物多样性走廊。桑托斯强调,加强领土军事化是该走廊的一个优势。在这种模式下,生态保护成为国家/自然安全的问题,以反叛乱的形式打击非法经济。气候变化和生态灾难意味着森林需要国家的军事力量来拯救它免受破坏。我们认为,这种保护意味着一种等待中的死亡政治;因为保护一部分就是谴责另一部分——被诬陷为敌人——遭受一定的破坏,因为土地同时被指定用于大规模开发项目。实际上,保护与某种形式的灭绝联系在一起。我们的文章考察了哥伦比亚两个日益军事化的边境保护区。第一个是安第斯山脉与亚马逊雨林的交汇处,在2016年与哥伦比亚革命武装力量达成和平协议后,该地区的森林砍伐有所增加。砍伐森林通常归因于古柯(用于生产可卡因)的种植,政府提出的解决方案是根除这种植物。我们认为,根除非法作物是一种强制灭绝的形式,它使森林军事化,目标是人类和非人类居民。第二个前沿领域涉及加勒比海沿岸的煤矿开采,该行业造成的大规模环境破坏导致该地区的生活被迫重组。军方守卫着开采现场,而那些反对煤矿开采的人则成为了被消灭的目标。我们将这两个案例——煤炭和古柯——纳入对话,以追溯采掘经济的灭绝驱动扩张,这一过程与武装冲突、贩毒以及现在的过渡政治交织在一起。
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Extinction in transition: coca, coal, and the production of enmity in Colombia's post-peace accords environment
At the Paris Climate Summit in 2015, then Colombian president Juan Manuel Santos proposed constructing a multi-national biodiversity corridor that would extend from the Andes to the Brazilian Atlantic coast. Santos highlighted increased militarization of the territory as one advantage of the corridor. In this model, ecological conservation becomes a matter of national/natural security, in the form of counterinsurgency to counter illegal economies. Climate change and ecological disaster mean the forest needs the military power of the State to save it from destruction. We argue that such conservation entails a form of necropolitics lying in wait; because to conserve one part is to condemn the other – framed as the enemy – to certain destruction, as land is simultaneously designated for large-scale development projects. Conservation, in effect, becomes tied to a form of extinction. Our article examines two increasingly militarized frontiers that work through conservation in Colombia. The first is where the Andes meets the Amazon rainforest, an area that has seen an increase in deforestation following the 2016 Peace Agreement with the FARC. Deforestation is often attributed to the cultivation of coca (used to produce cocaine), and the solution posited by the government is to eradicate the plant. We argue that eradication of illicit crops is a form of enforced extinction that militarizes the forest, targeting both human and non-human inhabitants. The second frontier concerns coal mining on the Caribbean coast, where mass environmental devastation induced by the industry has led to a forced reorganization of life in the region. The military guards the sites of extraction and those who oppose coal mining become targets for elimination. We bring these two cases – coal and coca – into dialogue, to trace the extinction-driven expansion of extractive economies, a process intertwined with armed conflict, narcotrafficking, and now with transitional politics.
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来源期刊
ACS Applied Bio Materials
ACS Applied Bio Materials Chemistry-Chemistry (all)
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
2.10%
发文量
464
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