{"title":"冲突地区的企业粮食制度:哥伦比亚 Zona de Reserva Campesina-Valle del Río Cimitarra 的武装暴力与农业","authors":"Jaskiran Kaur Chohan","doi":"10.1016/j.geoforum.2024.104112","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><p>Conflict is the number one driver of hunger globally but few studies reflect on the role of global agribusiness in the proliferation of conflictive dynamics. This article explores the Corporate Food Regime in a local conflict setting in Colombia, arguing that instability is a condition for capital accumulation in conflict zones. It offers a novel methodological and conceptual approach to traditional food regime studies that are global historical and based on periods of stable capital accumulation, with tensions pushing for regime change. Contrarily, in the Zona de Reserva Campesina-Valle del Río Cimitarra (ZRC-VRC) case study, violence and instability are central mechanisms for undermining campesino (peasant) agriculture and opening new market frontiers, therefore, central to solidifying the Corporate Food Regime. Here, corporations are both directly (through land purchase and cultivation of cash crops) and indirectly (through the intensive production model used in both illicit and licit crops by campesinos and the eradication of coca by the military) involved in violent dynamics, which ultimately supports corporate profiteering. The Corporate Food Regime not only profits from conflict but drives it, as wider macro-economic policies undermine campesino farming, incentivise coca cultivation and violent socio-ecological dynamics. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
冲突是全球饥饿的头号驱动因素,但很少有研究反思全球农业综合企业在冲突动态扩散中所扮演的角色。本文探讨了哥伦比亚当地冲突环境下的企业粮食制度,认为不稳定是冲突地区资本积累的一个条件。传统的粮食制度研究以全球历史和稳定的资本积累时期为基础,并以紧张局势推动制度变革。相反,在 Zona de Reserva Campesina-Valle del Río Cimitarra(ZRC-VRC)案例研究中,暴力和不稳定是破坏农民农业和开辟新市场边界的核心机制,因此也是巩固企业粮食制度的核心。在这里,企业直接(通过购买土地和种植经济作物)和间接(通过农民在非法和合法作物中使用的集约化生产模式以及军方根除古柯的行动)参与暴力活动,最终支持企业牟取暴利。企业粮食制度不仅从冲突中获利,而且推动冲突,因为更广泛的宏观经济政策破坏了农民的耕作,刺激了古柯种植和暴力社会生态动态。本文使用了来自 ZRC-VRC 的 47 个半结构式访谈、观察和实地记录的数据集,以强调企业权力在地方层面的不同表达途径。
The corporate food regime in conflict zones: Armed violence and agriculture in the Zona de Reserva Campesina-Valle del Río Cimitarra, Colombia
Conflict is the number one driver of hunger globally but few studies reflect on the role of global agribusiness in the proliferation of conflictive dynamics. This article explores the Corporate Food Regime in a local conflict setting in Colombia, arguing that instability is a condition for capital accumulation in conflict zones. It offers a novel methodological and conceptual approach to traditional food regime studies that are global historical and based on periods of stable capital accumulation, with tensions pushing for regime change. Contrarily, in the Zona de Reserva Campesina-Valle del Río Cimitarra (ZRC-VRC) case study, violence and instability are central mechanisms for undermining campesino (peasant) agriculture and opening new market frontiers, therefore, central to solidifying the Corporate Food Regime. Here, corporations are both directly (through land purchase and cultivation of cash crops) and indirectly (through the intensive production model used in both illicit and licit crops by campesinos and the eradication of coca by the military) involved in violent dynamics, which ultimately supports corporate profiteering. The Corporate Food Regime not only profits from conflict but drives it, as wider macro-economic policies undermine campesino farming, incentivise coca cultivation and violent socio-ecological dynamics. This paper uses a data set of 47 semi-structured interviews, observation, and field notes from the ZRC-VRC, to underline the different routes through which corporate power is articulated at a local level.
期刊介绍:
Geoforum is an international, inter-disciplinary journal, global in outlook, and integrative in approach. The broad focus of Geoforum is the organisation of economic, political, social and environmental systems through space and over time. Areas of study range from the analysis of the global political economy and environment, through national systems of regulation and governance, to urban and regional development, local economic and urban planning and resources management. The journal also includes a Critical Review section which features critical assessments of research in all the above areas.