Dr. Brian Egan, Department of Geography, Simon Fraser University
Dr.BrianEgan,DepartmentofGeography,SimonFraserUniversity - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Dr.BrianEgan,DepartmentofGeography,SimonFraserUniversity - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Dr.BrianEgan,DepartmentofGeography,SimonFraserUniversity poli;calecology emergedin1980soutofcri;queofstandardexplana;onsfor
poli;cal ecology
emerged in 1980s out of cri;que of standard explana;ons for
environmental degrada;on in global South, such as popula;on pressure, ‘backwardness’ of poor land users, or ‘market failure’.
early poli;cal ecologists argued that root causes of environmental
degrada;on were to be found through examina;on of broader social, economic, and poli;cal contexts; influenced by Marxist analysis.
“poli;cal ecology combines the concerns of ecology and a broadly defined
poli;cal economy. Together this encompasses the constantly shiPing dialec;c between society and land‐based resources, and also within classes and groups within society itself.” (Blaikie & Brookfield 1987)
great expansion of poli;cal ecology over last two decades, drawing on
broad range of social theories (race and gender, post‐structuralism and post‐colonialism, social movement theory, etc.).
economic systems
tradi;onal systems – focus on subsistence, decentralized, land and
resource use governed by customs and tradi;ons, limited role for market.
market (capitalist) systems – central role of markets (invisible hand) in
mee;ng human needs and wants, price of goods and services set by market supply‐demand.
command systems – government plays central role in produc;on and
distribu;on processes, and mee;ng human needs and wants.
mixed systems – some blend of tradi;onal, market, and command systems,
most commonly involves some level of state interven;on in market systems.
liberalism and capitalism
the world we live in today is strongly shaped by the interac;on of two
powerful forces: liberalism and capitalism.
the objec;ve of today’s class is to be[er understand these forces.
what are they? how did they come about? how do they work together?
liberalism
an enormously influen;al western poli;cal theory or ideology
characterized by:
individualism – the individual is the central focus; freedom of the
individual is highest goal; individuals should be free to pursue their own self‐interest; individual rights trump group rights.
egalitarianism and universalism – all individuals are equal (before the
law) and should be treated the same, regardless of background.
meliorism – an op;mis;c and progressive worldview. the government (as the source of law) plays an important role in
media;ng rela;ons between individuals.
economic liberalism
In economic terms, liberalism is characterized by:
central role of the market in mee;ng individual and societal objec;ves. antagonis;c or ambivalent stance towards government’s interven;on in
the economy; importance of ‘free’ or ‘self‐regula;ng’ market; reduce taxes.
belief in an open economy (free trade, minimal regula;on). importance of private property.
varie;es of liberalism
although the central tenets of liberalism remain unchanged,
some scholars point to different varie;es of liberalism that dominated during different periods:
classical liberalism – primacy of individual freedom, maximal role for
market, minimal role for government.
social liberalism – larger role for government interven;on in economy
to meet certain social and economic objec;ves (social welfare).
neo‐liberalism – recent return to a (narrow) form of classical liberalism,
dominant force over past 40 years.
capitalism
“An historically specific form of economic and social
- rganiza;on [… within which] the direct producer is separated
from ownership of the means of produc;on and the product
- f the labour process; and where […] this separa;on is
effected through the transforma;on of labour power into a commodity to be bought and sold on a labour market which is regulated by price signals.”
Derek Gregory, The Dic(onary of Human Geography, p. 56.
the great transforma;on
“All economic systems known to us up to the end of feudalism in Western
Europe [roughly the 14th century] were organized either on the principle of reciprocity or redistribu;on, or householding, or some combina;on of the three.” (Karl Polanyi, The Great Transforma(on, p. 57)
historically, economic system submerged (embedded) in society and social
rela;ons; in tradi;onal economies economic systems, markets existed but were not central and were controlled and regulated by social authority.
crea;on of a market economy and of self‐regulated markets is a specific
historical process, which came about in the 19th century; this was not a “natural” process but had to be ac;vely produced by certain socio‐ economic interests and the state.
market economy
“… an economic system controlled, regulated, and directed by market
prices; order in the produc;on and distribu;on of goods is entrusted to this self‐regula;ng mechanism.” (Polanyi, p. 71)
was en;rely unprecedented in human history; no economy had existed
that, even in principle, was controlled by markets; markets had long existed (e.g., in tradi;onal systems) but had been no more than incidental.
individual gain is central to market economy, and deemed socially
acceptable and desirable; individual gain and wealth accumula;on key to success of the market economy and society (‘trickle down’ theory).
land and labour
establishment of the market economic system required that the economy
be “disembedded” from society and from long‐standing forms of social and poli;cal control.
also required that labour and land be removed from social and poli;cal
control – disembedded from society – and located in the economic realm under the control of the market (e.g., labour market, real estate market); labor and land were to be treated as commodi;es.
Polanyi: land and labour are ‘fic;;ous commodi;es’; land is simply nature
and labour simply an aspect of human life; commodifica;on of these would have disastrous results, causing social upheaval and disloca;on, and ecological degrada;on (e.g., late 19th and early 20th centuries).
the double movement
the movement towards a fully expressed market society threatened the
very basis for human social and economic life, undermining families, communi;es, and the lands and resources on which human depend, crea;ng economic and poli;cal turmoil.
Polanyi argued that this movement could only advance so far before it was
met by a counter‐movement, of people seeking to protect the social and ecological founda;ons of their lives and livelihoods from the ravages of the market.
primary tool of this protec;onist countermovement was state interven;on in
the market, regula;on to limit the most damaging effects of the market.
even many proponents of open markets recognized the need for state
interven;on to advance economic interests (including capital accumula;on).
capitalism
key factors of produc;on: labour, capital, land (resources or nature). profit seeking is central and socially acceptable goal. capital accumula;on; profit gained from capital investment; the driving
force of capitalism.
internal contradic;ons and crises of capitalism: overproduc;on,
underconsump;on, etc.
capitalism is variegated (takes many forms), flexible, and crea;ve,
seemingly able to overcome all obstacles that arise.
capital resolves these crises, in part, geographically (it moves the problem
around).
key role of the state in establishing founda;ons for capitalism and in
ensuring its con;nued success.
capitalism, ecology, labour
Marxist scholars (and others) argue that capitalism consumes
- r destroys that on which it ul;mately depends:
it commodifies and consumes both nature and labour, hence degrading
the fundamental bases of its opera;on (and, more generally, the founda;ons for the crea;on of human wealth).
capital must con;nually seek ways to overcome these contradic;ons
and crises, and to con;nue capital accumula;on, by finding new and cheaper sources of labour and resources.
It does this in a number of ways, such as by pushing down wages in exis;ng labour
markets (undermine unions, bring in migrant labour), seeking to prevent or remove environmental regula;ons in capitalist economies, shiPing produc;on to places where labour is cheaper and where environmental standards less stringent, and incorpora;ng hitherto common assets (public land and resources) and social sectors (health, educa;on) into the private sector and thus into market economy.
primi;ve accumula;on
Marx: ‘primi;ve accumula;on’ refers to the original source of surplus that made
capital accumula;on possible, including exploita;on of labour and the priva;za;on
- f common lands and resources (enclosure movement in England, 17th to 19th C).
proletarianiza;on: displaced from their land and means of livelihood, peasants
must sell their labour in the market (rise of working class in industrial society).
primi;ve accumula;on con;nues today: capital con;nually seeks new and cheaper
sources of land (resources) and labour to maintain accumula;on (profits), through crea;on of new commodi;es and markets, shiP to new places (outsourcing), using new labour pools.
neo‐liberalism
“… is a theory of poli;cal economic prac;ces proposing that human well‐being can best be advanced by the maximiza;on
- f entrepreneurial freedoms within an ins;tu;onal framework
characterized by private property rights, individual liberty, unencumbered markets, and free trade. The role of the state is to create and preserve an ins;tu;onal framework appropriate to such prac;ces.” David Harvey.
David Harvey. 2007. Neoliberalism as Crea(ve Destruc(on, p. 22.
neo‐liberalism
key tenets / processes:
priva;za;on – corpora;za;on and commodifica;on of public assets
(land, resources, u;li;es, educa;on, health, knowledge, etc.)
free trade – lower barriers to movement of goods and capital across
borders (but no so much for labour).
deregula;on – cut regula;ons (‘red tape’) re. environment, labour, etc. reduce taxa;on – especially for capital (‘trickle down’ theory). redistribu;on – wealth flows upwards, increasing inequality. globaliza;on – neo‐liberal policies imposed on periphery (global South)
by core (global North) ins;tu;ons (WB, IMF, WTO).
The ‘Washington consensus’.
resistance
resistance to neo‐liberalism has taken many forms (social
movements):
labour – weakened in global North but less so in global South, focus on
sweatshops, child labour, repression of syndicalists.
an;‐corporate, an;‐globaliza;on, global solidarity – cri;que of
Washington consensus and interna;onal ins;tu;ons (IMF, WTO, etc.).
environmental – local and global campaigns. indigenous – land and resource rights, self‐determina;on, DRIPS. human and poli;cal rights – pro‐democracy, gender, age, race/ethnicity,
workers, etc.