暂时性使得无休止:澳大利亚的太平洋岛民农场工人和全球农业生产的持久危机

IF 2.4 2区 经济学 Q2 DEVELOPMENT STUDIES
Victoria Stead
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引用次数: 2

摘要

通过对澳大利亚东南部季节性工人计划(SWP)工人的长期民族志田野调查,我在本文中反思了无休止的临时工的经验及其对支撑澳大利亚当代园艺劳动的结构条件的影响。尽管在许多方面反映了一个独特历史时刻的特殊性,但COVID - 19大流行期间经历的无休止的暂时性也说明了当代澳大利亚农业中产生的更广泛、持久的条件。在这里,农业产业的重组给许多人带来了劳伦·伯兰特(Lauren Berlant)所描述的新自由主义下生活的“僵局”或“危机平凡”。与此同时,发展的逻辑——包括种族化的想象和边境制度——与农业外来工计划相结合,试图将整个人口和地区固定在希望渺茫的关系中。在这种情况下,我认为,大流行病暴露并加剧了结构性脆弱性和风险分配不均,这些都体现在澳大利亚农业工作的政治经济中,同时也为机构和团结开辟了新的(如果是暂时的)可能性。[源自作者]
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Temporariness made interminable: Pacific Islander farmworkers in Australia and the enduring crises of global agricultural production

Drawing on long-term ethnographic fieldwork with Seasonal Worker Programme (SWP) workers in south-east Australia, I reflect in this paper on the experience of interminable temporariness and on its implications for the structural conditions underpinning contemporary horticultural labour in Australia. Although in many ways reflective of the specificities of a unique historical moment, the interminable temporariness experienced through the COVID-19 pandemic also speaks to broader, enduring conditions produced within contemporary Australian agriculture. Here, the restructuring of the agri-industry produces for many what Lauren Berlant describes as the “impasse” or “crisis ordinariness” of life under neoliberalism. At the same time, logics of development—including racialized imaginaries and border regimes—articulate with agricultural guest worker schemes in ways that seek to fix whole populations and regions in relations of suspended hope. In this context, I argue, the pandemic exposed and intensified structural vulnerabilities and unequal distributions of risk, which are encoded in the political economy of farm work in Australia, while also cleaving open new, if tentative, possibilities for agency and solidarity.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.20
自引率
8.00%
发文量
54
期刊介绍: The Journal of Agrarian Change is a journal of agrarian political economy. It promotes investigation of the social relations and dynamics of production, property and power in agrarian formations and their processes of change, both historical and contemporary. It encourages work within a broad interdisciplinary framework, informed by theory, and serves as a forum for serious comparative analysis and scholarly debate. Contributions are welcomed from political economists, historians, anthropologists, sociologists, political scientists, economists, geographers, lawyers, and others committed to the rigorous study and analysis of agrarian structure and change, past and present, in different parts of the world.
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