太平洋岛屿

Marta Gentilucci
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摘要

本章探讨太平洋岛民如何渴望在全球体系中存在并得到承认。第一部分概述了该地区的殖民帝国主义。几十年的殖民主义和经济帝国主义使自然资源和人力资源资本化,影响了该地区社会变革的进程。在太平洋的所有殖民地,种植园和矿山对岛屿产生了强烈的影响,包括征用土地、外国工人的到来,以及总的来说所有长期的生态后果。本章的第二部分重点讨论如何逐步停止围绕市场、贸易路线、劳动力供应和战略商品控制的冲突。考察太平洋岛屿经济帝国主义的背景特殊性,使我们能够分析全球经济体系在特定地方背景下的各种形式,重点关注社会行动者抵制、改造和驯化来自外部的霸权因素的不同方式。资本主义,特别是采矿活动,并不一定被土著人民看作是一种敌对的定义,这在西方主流环境话语中经常出现。对一些社区来说,它是实现经济、社会和文化目标的一种手段。从土著生态宇宙学的角度分析采矿活动,目标是确定一个替代服从和抵抗之间严格二分法的空间。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Pacific Islands
This chapter explores how Pacific islanders have the desire to be present and acknowledged within the global system. The first part provides an overview of colonial imperialism in the region. Decades of colonial and economic imperialism have capitalized the natural and human resources influencing the course of social change in the region. In all the colonies of the Pacific, plantations and mines have had a strong impact on the islands including the expropriation of lands, the arrival of foreign workers, and in general all the long-term ecological consequences. The second part of the chapter focusses on the ways conflict over markets, trade routes, the supply of labour, and control over strategic commodities might be progressively halted. Looking at the contextual particularities of economic imperialism in the Pacific Islands allow us to analyse the various forms through which the global economic system is articulated in a specific local context, focusing on the different ways in which social actors resist, transform, and domesticate the hegemonic elements coming from outside. Capitalism, in particular mining activity, is not necessarily perceived by indigenous peoples as an antagonistic by definition, as often emerges in mainstream Western environmental discourse. For some communities it is a means to achieve economic, social, and cultural goals. Analysing mining activity from the lens of indigenous eco-cosmologies, the goal is to identify an alternative space to the rigid dichotomy between subjection and resistance.
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