Bikrum Gill
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Introduction
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The introduction offers an overview of the key themes and arguments presented in the book. It begins with a brief encapsulation of key approaches to land grabbing, and a summary of the empriical findings of the India-Ethiopia case study discussed in greater detail in Chapter 5. The remainder of the introduction is concerned with presenting the theoretical and historical framework through which the book will endeavor to understand the significance of the motive forces and consequences of the land grab. It takes as its point of departure the imperative of interpreting the global land grab in relation to two longstanding concerns of agrarian political economy – the agrarian question and primitive accumulation. By reconstructing these two concepts on a world-historical scale, it becomes possible to demonstrate how land grabbing implicates the ongoing agrarian questions of capitalist states encouraging their agribusiness capitals to expand production into the terra nullius of extra-national space. Key to this expansion, the introduction argues, is the racialized construction of extra-national space as “unused nature” awaiting appropriation by more “rational” social forces.

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The Political Ecology of Colonial Capitalism

Race, Nature, and Accumulation

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