{"title":"折射经济:北方钻石开采与社会再生产","authors":"W. Bernauer","doi":"10.1080/00130095.2022.2061946","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The late twentieth century was an important period of transition for the economy of the Northwest Territories (NWT), Canada. The territory’s gold mines—a mainstay of the regional economy since the 1930s—ceased production. In their place, several diamond mines came online, ushering in a new regime of extraction. Unlike historic mines in the NWT, recent diamond mining operations have made a prolonged effort to incorporate Indigenous peoples into their labor forces, largely in response to Indigenous political organizing. In Refractive Economies, Rebecca Jane Hall examines the implications of these diamond mines for Indigenous Dene women. Drawing on academic fieldwork, document analysis, and her extensive experience working with Indigenous women’s organizations, Hall’s analysis focuses on how diamond mining has affected the social reproduction work performed by Dene women. Hall’s synthesis of feminist, Marxist, and Indigenous political economy, together with her keen attention to geographic concepts like space and scale, has resulted in a timely and important contribution to economic geography and Northern Studies in Canada. Clearly written and well argued, her book will be useful to scholars interested in the geography and political economy of extraction, settler colonialism, and violence against Indigenous women. Divided into three parts, Refracted Economies includes chapters pertaining to the application of ideas from feminist political economy (FPE) to northern mixed economies, the political economy of diamond mining, and the implications of diamond mines for Indigenous women’s labor. The relationship between diamond mining and violence is a prominent theme throughout. Hall examines both the growth of the Canadian diamond mining industry in the context of global discourses of blood diamonds as well as the relationship between diamond mining and violence against Indigenous women (both structural and embodied) in Northern Canada. One of Hall’s most notable contributions to economic geography is her application of concepts from FPE to fly-in-fly-out (FIFO) mining operations in Northern Canada. According to Hall, in FIFO operations, the division between capitalist production and social reproduction—an important topic of analysis and criticism within the field of FPE—manifests itself spatially. The sites of capitalist production (mines) are segregated from the sites of intergenerational social reproduction (Dene communities). Hall argues that this restructuring has intensified social reproduction in individual households while causing a decline in the interhousehold linkages that previously characterized the Dene mixed economy. However, Indigenous women frequently resist this atomization of their social reproduction labors by continuing to prioritize interhousehold linkages. Hall also explores FIFO’s implications for relationships between Indigenous men and women. She argues that FIFO has created new structural BO O K R EV EW","PeriodicalId":48225,"journal":{"name":"Economic Geography","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":7.2000,"publicationDate":"2022-05-05","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Refractive Economies: Diamond Mining and Social Reproduction in the North\",\"authors\":\"W. 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引用次数: 1
摘要
20世纪后期是加拿大西北地区经济转型的重要时期。自20世纪30年代以来一直是该地区经济支柱的金矿停止了生产。取而代之的是,几座钻石矿投产,开启了一种新的开采制度。与西北地区的历史矿山不同,最近的钻石开采作业长期努力将土著人民纳入其劳动力,主要是对土著政治组织的回应。在《折射经济》一书中,丽贝卡·简·霍尔考察了这些钻石矿对土著迪尼妇女的影响。根据学术实地调查、文献分析和她与土著妇女组织合作的丰富经验,霍尔的分析侧重于钻石开采如何影响了土著妇女从事的社会再生产工作。霍尔对女权主义、马克思主义和土著政治经济学的综合研究,以及她对空间和规模等地理概念的敏锐关注,为加拿大的经济地理学和北方研究做出了及时而重要的贡献。她的书文笔清晰,论述有力,对于那些对地理和政治经济、移民殖民主义以及对土著妇女的暴力行为感兴趣的学者来说,这本书将是有用的。《折射经济》分为三个部分,包括有关女权主义政治经济学(FPE)思想在北方混合经济中的应用的章节,钻石开采的政治经济学,以及钻石矿对土著妇女劳动的影响。钻石开采与暴力之间的关系是贯穿始终的一个突出主题。霍尔考察了在全球血腥钻石话语的背景下加拿大钻石采矿业的发展,以及加拿大北部钻石开采与对土著妇女的暴力(结构性和具体)之间的关系。霍尔对经济地理学最显著的贡献之一是她将FPE概念应用于加拿大北部的飞进飞出(FIFO)采矿作业。根据霍尔的观点,在FIFO操作中,资本主义生产和社会再生产之间的划分——fpe领域内分析和批评的一个重要主题——在空间上表现出来。资本主义生产场所(矿山)与代际社会再生产场所(Dene社区)是分开的。霍尔认为,这种结构调整加强了个别家庭的社会再生产,同时导致以前以Dene混合经济为特征的家庭间联系的下降。然而,土著妇女经常通过继续优先考虑家庭间的联系来抵制这种社会再生产劳动的原子化。霍尔还探讨了先进先出法对土著男女关系的影响。她认为先进先出创造了新的结构BO O K R EV EW
Refractive Economies: Diamond Mining and Social Reproduction in the North
The late twentieth century was an important period of transition for the economy of the Northwest Territories (NWT), Canada. The territory’s gold mines—a mainstay of the regional economy since the 1930s—ceased production. In their place, several diamond mines came online, ushering in a new regime of extraction. Unlike historic mines in the NWT, recent diamond mining operations have made a prolonged effort to incorporate Indigenous peoples into their labor forces, largely in response to Indigenous political organizing. In Refractive Economies, Rebecca Jane Hall examines the implications of these diamond mines for Indigenous Dene women. Drawing on academic fieldwork, document analysis, and her extensive experience working with Indigenous women’s organizations, Hall’s analysis focuses on how diamond mining has affected the social reproduction work performed by Dene women. Hall’s synthesis of feminist, Marxist, and Indigenous political economy, together with her keen attention to geographic concepts like space and scale, has resulted in a timely and important contribution to economic geography and Northern Studies in Canada. Clearly written and well argued, her book will be useful to scholars interested in the geography and political economy of extraction, settler colonialism, and violence against Indigenous women. Divided into three parts, Refracted Economies includes chapters pertaining to the application of ideas from feminist political economy (FPE) to northern mixed economies, the political economy of diamond mining, and the implications of diamond mines for Indigenous women’s labor. The relationship between diamond mining and violence is a prominent theme throughout. Hall examines both the growth of the Canadian diamond mining industry in the context of global discourses of blood diamonds as well as the relationship between diamond mining and violence against Indigenous women (both structural and embodied) in Northern Canada. One of Hall’s most notable contributions to economic geography is her application of concepts from FPE to fly-in-fly-out (FIFO) mining operations in Northern Canada. According to Hall, in FIFO operations, the division between capitalist production and social reproduction—an important topic of analysis and criticism within the field of FPE—manifests itself spatially. The sites of capitalist production (mines) are segregated from the sites of intergenerational social reproduction (Dene communities). Hall argues that this restructuring has intensified social reproduction in individual households while causing a decline in the interhousehold linkages that previously characterized the Dene mixed economy. However, Indigenous women frequently resist this atomization of their social reproduction labors by continuing to prioritize interhousehold linkages. Hall also explores FIFO’s implications for relationships between Indigenous men and women. She argues that FIFO has created new structural BO O K R EV EW
期刊介绍:
Economic Geography is a peer-reviewed journal dedicated to publishing original research that advances the field of economic geography. Their goal is to publish high-quality studies that are both theoretically robust and grounded in empirical evidence, contributing to our understanding of the geographic factors and consequences of economic processes. It welcome submissions on a wide range of topics that provide primary evidence for significant theoretical interventions, offering key insights into important economic, social, development, and environmental issues. To ensure the highest quality publications, all submissions undergo a rigorous peer-review process with at least three external referees and an editor. Economic Geography has been owned by Clark University since 1925 and plays a central role in supporting the global activities of the field, providing publications and other forms of scholarly support. The journal is published five times a year in January, March, June, August, and November.