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A journey into political ecology & vulnerabilities

This blog is about a journey that I have set out the sails. After realizing that online world is distracting me from doing my real work, which is getting a PhD, I decided to start a blog to take stocks of my journey. On the other hand, as a person who never had ability to take good notes and be organized, it's my wishful intention to start changing my way of working. Thus long story made short, the aim of this blog is to share my PhD journey about political ecology, social vulnerability, global environmental change, globalization and other topics that I happen to have interest in through time while taking notes (in English/Turkish/Spanish where appropriate or however I feel like) about my progress and my readings. Well, as you might have guessed, this is going to be no different than some sort of a messy fridge memo board. Let it be.

6 Ocak 2012 Cuma

David Harvey (2006) Spaces of Global Capitalism: Towards A Theory of Uneven Geographical Development, Verso Books


David Harvey (2006) Spaces of Global Capitalism: Towards A Theory of Uneven Geographical Development, Verso Books

As most writing on his work suggest, David Harvey is the most cited critical geographer and the fourth most cited social scientist in general. His works since 1970’s have introduced very important concepts in Marxist thought (ie. elaboration of space-time interaction of capital following Lefevbre) and brought daylight into newly emerging fields like political ecology with concepts such as spatio-temporal fix and accumulation by dispossession. Spaces of Global Capitalism: Towards A Theory of Uneven Geographical Development, in this sense, adds another block in attempting to produce “unified field theory of uneven geographical development” (pg. 75).

This book of Harvey is based upon Hettner-lectures he has delivered in University of Heidelberg in 2004. It is basically structured in three parts, each forming a different thread of Harvey’s work since to date. It encompasses Harvey’s rigorous critique of neoliberalism and capitalism’s self-making, then moves into the territory of theorizing uneven geographical development which gives the book its sub-title and finally closes with a discussion on introducing space as a key word / key concept in Marxist thought.

The book opens with an essay titled Neoliberalism and The Restoration of Class Power. Here Harvey focuses on the emergence of neoliberalism (as more thoroughly elaborated in his book The New Imperialism) and its implementation across the globe through producing consent and coercion. After this historical introduction and ground setting, Harvey moves on to explain the neoliberal state and elaborates the example of China. “The explicit authoritarianism of the Chinese instance” Harvey argues ”[...]is troubling in view of the more covert anti-democratic tendencies implicit in neoliberalism”. He argues that such successful implementation of neoliberal agenda with coercion in states like China and Singapore can deepen the antidemocratic tendencies elsewhere. Harvey defines two main factors on neoliberalism’s succes as volatility of uneven geographical development and its success in restoring class power of the ruling elite. He goes on to argue the neoliberal state with its legal monopoly of violence playing a crucial role in backing and promoting these processes. This section lays down the empirical backdrop of the book to prepare for the second section which theorizes the uneven geographical development.

In this theory-in-making on uneven development, Harvey argues that four conditionalities must co-exist for a unified field theory on this subject matter. He lists these as (i) material embedding of capital accumulation, (ii) accumulation by dispossession (iii)law-like character of capital in space-time and (iv) class struggles across scales. Despite establishing a theory for academic purposes, Harvey doesn’t miss to include that critique of everyday life provides us with possibilities for its transformation in the Gramscian sense (pg. 86). In setting the theory, Harvey emphasizes the importance of time and space for capital accumulation. He takes this further by discussing that uneven geographical development is inherent to functioning of capitalism and indeed it is the capitalism.

After what I would call empirical and then integrative theoretical sections of the book, the final chapter of the book titled as “Space as a key word” puts forward Harvey’s argument that Marxian tradition focuses very little (with the righteous exception of Lefebvre) on understanding the problematic of space and time. As himself rightly asserts, space turn out to be a extraordinarily complicated key word in geography and politics of the public. Harvey walks us through this conceptual chapter in order to discuss the opportunities of using space as a critical tool in Marxian analyses. His contribution to this discussion finds its niche in reworking on Lefebvre’s tripartite division on space as material space, spaces of representation and representations of space. Harvey argues that space could be understood as being absolute, relative or relational. None of these alone is enough to explain the power of space in geographical explanations he argues. Elaborating his argument through redesigning of post 9/11 Ground Zero, Harvey argues that these 3 explanations of space coexist and needs to be treated as a whole. This complementary understanding of space allows us to understand and create “spaces of hope” in Harvey’s vision. This book contributes to what Harvey calls as “troubling geographies” and thus for this it will be a valuable resource for students of capitalism and its troubling effects on human geography.

Peet, R., Robbins, P. and Watts, M. J. (eds.) (2011) Global Political Ecology, Routledge


Peet, R., Robbins, P. and Watts, M. J. (eds.) (2011) Global Political Ecology, Routledge (pg. 444)

Paul Robbins (2004), in his book “Political Ecology: A Critical Introduction”, defines the purpose of political ecology as an emergent field as making visible “all the struggle hidden behind the quiet vista”. This critical insight to a developing body of literature calls for a move from studies of environmental “destruction” to “production”, from “peasants” to “producers” and from the “chains” to “networks” of explanation. In a similar vein, the second edition of the edited volume by Peet and Watts (2004), titled “Liberation Ecologies”, published in the same year challenges us all by daring to ask “what’s next?” for liberating the political ecology.

Answers to these challenges come in the shape of an edited volume by the very own authors of the books mentioned above. Published 7 years after these books, Global Political Ecology edited by Peet, Robbins and Watts (2011) is a profound attempt to bring together state of the art in a field that links the “political economy of global capitalism with the political ecology of environmental disasters and failed environmental policies”. Opening up with a discussion of failed climate change policies of post-COP15 era, the book starts by dissecting climate change debate as an exemplar of political ecology’s promise to see beyond what is on the surface. In this regard, Peet, Robbins and Watts identify what seems to embody the central issues in contemporary political ecology literature which are respectively (i) planetary characters of the ecological crisis, (ii) centrality of expert knowledges, (iii) global problems of basic provisioning services to keep ecosystems running and energetic basis of modernity itself and (iv) a particular alignment of environmental rule (pg. 10-11).

In their introductory chapted setting ground rules of the volume, authors take up the challenge to lay down the theoretical basis of neo-Marxist and poststructuralist lineages in political ecology research successfully. By doing so, they both pay attention to global flows of capital and materials as well as power-knowledge nexus in defining a road map for a global political ecology of the 21st century. Authors’ detailed analysis of main issues in political ecology establishes a firm ground to be used as an introductory text in any political ecology class. To illustrate the central issues emerging from this analysis, this edited volume is divided into 7 sections, each taking up the challenge to present a radical insight into the most pressing ecological issues of our times. It opens up with a section on food, health and the body where agriculture, livestock breeding, fisheries policy and public health issues are problematized with a critical insight. However rich in substance in regards to latter 3 topics, this section remains a little short of what might be analyzed among the overarching political ecology topics in global agriculture. Thus a rather US-EU dominated vision of “global” political ecology of agriculture in this chapter doesn’t fulfill the promise of the book fully.

The next chapter is structured on the political ecology of the slum world. Recalling Mary Douglas’ (1966) remark that “[d]irt offends against order”, this chapter critically analyzes two intrinsicly intermeshed topics which are global flows of garbage and green evictions in the third world both of which are in turn linked to dominant discourses on “lack of purity”. Following this, third chapter in this volume is dedicated to the modalities of environmental governance which find its manifestations in ecolabelling, insurance sector and management of risk and carbon offsetting schemes. Providing critical insights into global environmental governance, this chapter only falls short in addressing the recent REDD+ and payments for ecosystem services debates.

The consequent two chapters on political ecology of security and political ecology of energy scarcity provide a complementary understanding of the nature-security nexus as well as energy scarcity discourse as a means to securitize geographies and populations. Starting with internalization of “the natural” to be used in modern warfare (ie. use of honeybee and mutant ecologies), the fourth chapter continues with a discussion on production of national natures through extensive use of coercive state tactiques in stripping jungles to make managable forests and populations. Fifth chapter in this volume builds the energy basis on top of these discussions. Despite being limited on political ecologies of oil, this chapter successfully address construction of energy scarcity and its geopolitical consequences.

Arriving later in the volume is a rather short but comprehensive chapter on political ecologies of water. This chapter open with a discussion on water privatization and water as commons and follows with a discussion on social construction of water scarcity and its consequences. The volume comes to an end with a chapter on biopolitics of life focusing on political ecologies of genetic manipulation. Foucauldian concept of biopower/biopolitics and technologies of government seems to be connecting a few articles in the volume theoretically (Sections 5, 12, 18).
This well-established volume calls for a deeper understanding of “the world as it is” as David Harvey would call it. Thus it hinges itself on the political ecology of the possible, that is a world in which artificial separations of man vs. nature and ecology vs. economy disappears and deconstructs the common knowledge on the inevitability of catastrophic self-destruction of mankind. Despite some minor shortcomings (ie. little methodological diversity), this volume will probably be at the top of the reference book pile in political ecology in years to come.

References:
1) Douglas, M. (1966) “Purity and Danger”, Routledge & Kegan Paul, London.
2) Peet, R. and Watts, M. J. (2004): “Liberation Ecologies”. Routledge, London.
3) Robbins, P. (2004): “Political Ecology: A Critical Introduction”. Wiley-Blackwell Publishing, Malden.