Rooted in Violence: Civil War, International Trade and the Expansion of Palm Oil in Colombia

被引:34
|
作者
Maher, David [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Salford, Directorate Polit & Contemporary Hist, Salford M5 4WT, Lancs, England
关键词
civil war; disaggregation; international trade; political economy of conflict; Colombia; palm oil; economic development; POLITICAL-ECONOMY; GLOBALIZATION; CONFLICTS; DETERMINANTS; DISPLACEMENT; GROWTH;
D O I
10.1080/13563467.2014.923825
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
Internal armed conflict severely inhibits economic growth according to a prominent set of civil war literature. Similarly, emerging scholarship finds that civil war inhibits processes of economic globalisation which are argued to produce economic growth. A case in point is international trade, which is reportedly stymied by intra-state war. In contrast, this article employs a critical theoretical framework which acknowledges the often violent tendencies of globalised capitalism. By analysing Colombia's palm oil industry, this article argues that civil war violence can facilitate international trade. In the case study which is presented, violence perpetrated by Colombia's public armed forces and right-wing paramilitaries has enabled the palm oil sector to enter and compete in the globalised economy. This includes processes of forced displacement, which have acquired land for palm oil cultivation, and violence directed at civil groups deemed inimical to the interests of the palm oil sector. By employing a micro-level approach, this article attempts to isolate violent trends related to palm oil cultivation in Meta, the largest African palm-growing region in Colombia. An attempt is therefore made to give an empirically informed account of how violence in Colombia's civil war is facilitating palm oil exports.
引用
收藏
页码:299 / 330
页数:32
相关论文
共 26 条
  • [1] CIVIL WAR AS A SOURCE OF INTERNATIONAL VIOLENCE
    FORMAN, EM
    JOURNAL OF POLITICS, 1972, 34 (04): : 1111 - 1134
  • [2] Oil palm plantations in Colombia: a model of future expansion
    Castiblanco, Carmenza
    Etter, Andres
    Aide, T. Mitchell
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY, 2013, 27 : 172 - 183
  • [3] Intervention, war expansion, and the international sources of civil war
    Lango, Hans-Inge
    CONFLICT MANAGEMENT AND PEACE SCIENCE, 2023, 40 (03) : 304 - 324
  • [4] Lowering environmental costs of oil-palm expansion in Colombia
    Garcia-Ulloa, John
    Sloan, Sean
    Pacheco, Pablo
    Ghazoul, Jaboury
    Koh, Lian Pin
    CONSERVATION LETTERS, 2012, 5 (05): : 366 - 375
  • [5] Quantifying impacts of oil palm expansion on Colombia's threatened biodiversity
    Ocampo-Penuela, Natalia
    Garcia-Ulloa, John
    Ghazoul, Jaboury
    Etter, Andres
    BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION, 2018, 224 : 117 - 121
  • [7] Impacts of oil palm expansion in Colombia: What do socioeconomic indicators show?
    Castiblanco, Carmenza
    Etter, Andres
    Ramirez, Alberto
    LAND USE POLICY, 2015, 44 : 31 - 43
  • [8] The Violence in Colombia: Forbidden Remembrance? The Civil War in Politics and Society 1948-2008
    Rehm, Lukas
    IBEROAMERICANA, 2012, 12 (46): : 299 - 301
  • [9] Violence and Restraint in Civil War: Civilian Targeting in the Shadow of International Law
    Smith, Thomas W.
    HUMAN RIGHTS QUARTERLY, 2018, 40 (03) : 716 - 718
  • [10] Violence and Restraint in Civil War: Civilian Targeting in the Shadow of International Law
    Owens, Patricia
    PERSPECTIVES ON POLITICS, 2017, 15 (04) : 1102 - 1103