The coloniality of power on the green frontier: commodities and violent territorialisation in Colombia's Amazon

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The coloniality of power on the green frontier : commodities and violent territorialisation in Colombia's Amazon. / Acosta García, Nicolás; Fold, Niels.

I: Geoforum, Bind 128, 01.2022, s. 192-201.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Acosta García, N & Fold, N 2022, 'The coloniality of power on the green frontier: commodities and violent territorialisation in Colombia's Amazon', Geoforum, bind 128, s. 192-201. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoforum.2021.11.025

APA

Acosta García, N., & Fold, N. (2022). The coloniality of power on the green frontier: commodities and violent territorialisation in Colombia's Amazon. Geoforum, 128, 192-201. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoforum.2021.11.025

Vancouver

Acosta García N, Fold N. The coloniality of power on the green frontier: commodities and violent territorialisation in Colombia's Amazon. Geoforum. 2022 jan.;128:192-201. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoforum.2021.11.025

Author

Acosta García, Nicolás ; Fold, Niels. / The coloniality of power on the green frontier : commodities and violent territorialisation in Colombia's Amazon. I: Geoforum. 2022 ; Bind 128. s. 192-201.

Bibtex

@article{73971ce799a34880abbaa4a76a01c7ef,
title = "The coloniality of power on the green frontier: commodities and violent territorialisation in Colombia's Amazon",
abstract = "The dynamic frontier-making in Colombia's Amazon department of Caquet{\'a} is the focus of this article. Since the mid-nineteenth century, booms and busts of commodity production have been associated with violent struggles as actors have challenged pre-existing orders and authorities. At different times, the area has been controlled by the Catholic Church, the Colombian state, FARC and paramilitary groups, following the different boom-and-bust cycles of commodity production. We use this case to theorise on the general mechanisms behind frontier-making. Reading the frontier literature through the lens of the coloniality of power, we draw four interrelated categories to access frontier-making analytically: commodity production, dispossession, hegemon, and subjectivities. These are used to explain six distinct periods in the political economy of Caquet{\'a} and its spatial reconfigurations. We argue that current issues of distrust on the state, violence, and land grabbing, are best understood as part of a historical continuum of multiple actors keeping the area as a frontier space.",
keywords = "Coca, Coloniality of power, Farmers, Frontiers, War on drugs",
author = "{Acosta Garc{\'i}a}, Nicol{\'a}s and Niels Fold",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2021 The Author(s)",
year = "2022",
month = jan,
doi = "10.1016/j.geoforum.2021.11.025",
language = "English",
volume = "128",
pages = "192--201",
journal = "Geoforum",
issn = "0016-7185",
publisher = "Pergamon Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The coloniality of power on the green frontier

T2 - commodities and violent territorialisation in Colombia's Amazon

AU - Acosta García, Nicolás

AU - Fold, Niels

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2021 The Author(s)

PY - 2022/1

Y1 - 2022/1

N2 - The dynamic frontier-making in Colombia's Amazon department of Caquetá is the focus of this article. Since the mid-nineteenth century, booms and busts of commodity production have been associated with violent struggles as actors have challenged pre-existing orders and authorities. At different times, the area has been controlled by the Catholic Church, the Colombian state, FARC and paramilitary groups, following the different boom-and-bust cycles of commodity production. We use this case to theorise on the general mechanisms behind frontier-making. Reading the frontier literature through the lens of the coloniality of power, we draw four interrelated categories to access frontier-making analytically: commodity production, dispossession, hegemon, and subjectivities. These are used to explain six distinct periods in the political economy of Caquetá and its spatial reconfigurations. We argue that current issues of distrust on the state, violence, and land grabbing, are best understood as part of a historical continuum of multiple actors keeping the area as a frontier space.

AB - The dynamic frontier-making in Colombia's Amazon department of Caquetá is the focus of this article. Since the mid-nineteenth century, booms and busts of commodity production have been associated with violent struggles as actors have challenged pre-existing orders and authorities. At different times, the area has been controlled by the Catholic Church, the Colombian state, FARC and paramilitary groups, following the different boom-and-bust cycles of commodity production. We use this case to theorise on the general mechanisms behind frontier-making. Reading the frontier literature through the lens of the coloniality of power, we draw four interrelated categories to access frontier-making analytically: commodity production, dispossession, hegemon, and subjectivities. These are used to explain six distinct periods in the political economy of Caquetá and its spatial reconfigurations. We argue that current issues of distrust on the state, violence, and land grabbing, are best understood as part of a historical continuum of multiple actors keeping the area as a frontier space.

KW - Coca

KW - Coloniality of power

KW - Farmers

KW - Frontiers

KW - War on drugs

U2 - 10.1016/j.geoforum.2021.11.025

DO - 10.1016/j.geoforum.2021.11.025

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85122106462

VL - 128

SP - 192

EP - 201

JO - Geoforum

JF - Geoforum

SN - 0016-7185

ER -

ID: 291125739