飓风“伊尔玛”期间土地保有权制度的复原力:殖民遗产如何影响安提瓜和巴布达的救灾和恢复

C. Look, Erin Friedman, Geneviève Godbout
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引用次数: 10

摘要

安提瓜和巴布达都对为减轻2017年9月飓风“厄玛”造成的损失而实施的灾难恢复解决方案表示担忧。在巴布达,公共土地所有权的潜在损失和外国投资者攫取土地的可能性往往使该岛成为灾难资本主义的受害者,而不是一个有复原力的社区。与此同时,这两个岛屿都没有通过任何实质性的立法反应或立即的政策转变来解决其对未来极端事件的脆弱性。虽然我们必须关注对弱势群体的剥削以及灾后经济结构调整的努力,以便更好地了解重大天气事件的影响,我们认为,在“厄玛”飓风过后,巴布达公有土地使用权面临的威胁,以及安提瓜和巴布达政府在这一问题上的立法越权,可以从安提瓜和巴布达在奴隶制、解放和后殖民独立时期持续不断的土地斗争中产生的各种景观遗产和连续性来理解。本文对过去进行了区分,以便了解土地权属制度的恢复力,以及这种恢复力如何影响“伊尔玛”后时代的灾后响应质量。利用路径依赖理论,我们在土地权利的殖民遗产框架内研究了应对飓风Irma的土地权属紧张关系。更具体地说,本文试图研究这些土地所有权制度是如何形成的,以及随着时间的推移,它以何种方式受到质疑和抵制。我们的研究结果表明,在18世纪和19世纪的实践形成的景观之上,强加现代土地利用解决方案如何使规划和减轻未来灾害影响的任务复杂化。伊尔玛飓风对巴布达的影响进一步表明,对立法改革的抵制可能会导致植根于社会凝聚力和公共土地所有权的某种形式的生态限制,而这种限制现在正受到威胁。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Resilience of Land Tenure Regimes During Hurricane Irma: How Colonial Legacies Impact Disaster Response and Recovery in Antigua and Barbuda
Antiguans and Barbudans have both raised concerns over the disaster recovery solutions put in place to mitigate damages sustained during Hurricane Irma in September 2017. In Barbuda, the potential loss of commonhold land ownership and the possibility of a land grab by foreign investors has tended to portray the island as a victim of disaster capitalism rather than as a resilient community. At the same time, neither island has addressed its vulnerabilities to future extreme events through any substantive legislative response, or immediate policy shifts. While it is vital that we attend to the exploitation of vulnerable populations and the efforts of economic restructuring that follow a disaster to better understand the impact of major weather events, we propose that the threat to commonhold land tenure in Barbuda and the legislative overreach of Antigua’s government on the matter following Hurricane Irma can be understood in terms of various landscape legacies and continuities rooted in ongoing struggles over land in Antigua and Barbuda spanning the periods of slavery, emancipation, and post-colonial independence. This paper situates the past with distinction in order to understand the resilience of land tenure regimes, and the ways in which this resilience affects the quality of post-disaster response in the post-Irma era. Using path dependency theory, we examine the tensions over land tenure in response to Hurricane Irma within the framework of colonial legacies of land rights. More specifically, this paper attempts to examine how these land tenure regimes took shape, and in what ways it has been contested and resisted over time. Our findings demonstrate how the imposition of modern land-use solutions atop a landscape shaped by 18th- and 19th-century practices complicates the mandate to plan for and mitigate the impacts of future disasters. The impact of Hurricane Irma on Barbuda further shows how resistance to legislative change might result in a form of ecological restraint rooted in social-cohesion and commonhold land tenure that is now coming under threat.
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