Reworking the metabolic rift: La Via Campesina, agrarian citizenship, and food sovereignty

被引:169
作者
Wittman, Hannah
机构
[1] Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, BC
关键词
food sovereignty; citizenship; agrarian transformation; nature; metabolic rift; LATIN-AMERICA; POLITICS; MOVEMENTS; WORLD; DEMOCRATIZATION; AGRICULTURE; MATERIALITY; TECHNOLOGY; LANDSCAPES; RESISTANCE;
D O I
10.1080/03066150903353991
中图分类号
Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
030303 ;
摘要
Amidst increasing concerns about climate change, food shortages, and widespread environmental degradation, a demand is emerging for ways to resolve longstanding social and ecological contradictions present in contemporary capitalist models of production and social organisation. This paper first discusses how agriculture, as the most intensive historical nexus between society and nature, has played a pivotal role in social and ecological change. I explore how agriculture has been integrally associated with successive metabolic ruptures between society and nature, and then argue that these ruptures have not only led to widespread rural dislocation and environmental degradation, but have also disrupted the practice of agrarian citizenship through a series of interlinked and evolving philosophical, ideological, and material conditions. The first section of the paper thus examines the de-linking of agriculture, citizenship, and nature as a result of ongoing cycles of a metabolic rift, as a 'crucial law of motion' and central contradiction of changing socio-ecological relations in the countryside. I then argue that new forms of agrarian resistance, exemplified by the contemporary international peasant movement La Via Campesina's call for food sovereignty, create a potential to reframe and reconstitute an agrarian citizenship that reworks the metabolic rift between society and nature. A food sovereignty model founded on practices of agrarian citizenship and ecologically sustainable local food production is then analysed for its potential to challenge the dominant model of large-scale, capitalist, and export-based agriculture.
引用
收藏
页码:805 / 826
页数:22
相关论文
共 103 条
[71]   Peasants make their own history, but not just as they please ... [J].
McMichael, Philip .
JOURNAL OF AGRARIAN CHANGE, 2008, 8 (2-3) :205-228
[72]   Reframing development: Global peasant movements and the new agrarian question [J].
McMichael, Philip .
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENT STUDIES-REVUE CANADIENNE D ETUDES DU DEVELOPPEMENT, 2006, 27 (04) :471-483
[73]   Peasant prospects in the neoliberal age [J].
McMichael, Philip .
NEW POLITICAL ECONOMY, 2006, 11 (03) :407-418
[74]   A food regime genealogy [J].
McMichael, Philip .
JOURNAL OF PEASANT STUDIES, 2009, 36 (01) :139-169
[75]  
MCNEELY JA, 2002, ECOAGRICULTURE STRAT
[76]  
MELO D, 2009, ATE AGRONEGOCIO REJE
[77]  
Merchant Carolyn., 1989, The Death of Nature: Women, Ecology, and the Scientific Revolution
[78]  
Mittelman JH, 1998, THIRD WORLD Q, V19, P847
[79]  
Moore J.W., 2000, Organization Environment, V13, P123, DOI 10.1177/1086026600132001
[80]   Capitalism as world-ecology - Braudel and Marx on environmental history [J].
Moore, JW .
ORGANIZATION & ENVIRONMENT, 2003, 16 (04) :431-458