The Political Ecology of Colonial Capitalism

Race, Nature, and Accumulation

Author:
Bikrum Gill
Search for other papers by Bikrum Gill in
Current site
Google Scholar
PubMed
Close

This book situates the post financial crisis phenomenon of large-scale agricultural land acquisition, otherwise known as the global land grab, within the longue duree of the capitalist world system. It does so by advancing a theoretical and historical framework, called the political ecology of colonial capitalism, that clarifies the key role played by the co-production of race and nature in provisioning the “ecological surplus” that has historically secured the emergence and reproduction of capitalist development. This framework specifically foregrounds the racialized disarticulation of sovereign Indigenous earth-worlds as the necessary condition of possibility for the reduction of the colonial frontier to a state of “unused” nature. While the racialized denial of the reproductive conditions of the colonial frontier’s fertile soils ultimately exhausts the latter’s surplus provisioning capacity, the longue duree of the capitalist world-ecology has been marked by successive attempts to overcome such exhaustion by forging, through technologies of racialization, new frontiers of “unused” externalized natures. The key premise of this book is that, in light of the food price crisis indexing the exhaustion of the accumulation capacity of the neoliberal epoch of the capitalist world-ecology, the global land grab constitutes another such attempted moment of re-securing the cheap food premise through racialized frontier appropriation. The argument advanced here is that, within the neoliberal crisis conjuncture, the hegemonic resolution of capital’s escalating social-ecological contradictions necessitates, through the practice of “global primitive accumulation,” the racialized construction of frontiers of unused nature in emergent zones of appropriation.

Abstract only
Log-in for full text
  • Collapse
  • Expand

All of MUP's digital content including Open Access books and journals is now available on manchesterhive.

 

    • Full book download (HTML)
    • Full book download (PDF with hyperlinks)
All Time Past Year Past 30 Days
Abstract Views 2009 2009 368
Full Text Views 162 162 35
PDF Downloads 102 102 34