scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Laos and the making of a 'relational' resource frontier

Keith Barney
- 01 Jun 2009 - 
- Vol. 175, Iss: 2, pp 146-159
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this article, the contemporary relevance of the resource frontier, drawing on examples of nature's commodification and enclosure under way in the peripheral Southeast Asian country of Laos, is revisited.
Abstract
This paper seeks to reconsider the contemporary relevance of the resource frontier, drawing on examples of nature's commodification and enclosure under way in the peripheral Southeast Asian country of Laos. Frontiers are conceived as relational zones of economy, nature and society; spaces of capitalist transition, where new forms of social property relations and systems of legality are rapidly established in response to market imperatives. Customary property rights on the resource frontier can be seized by powerful actors in crucial political moments, preparing the territorial stage for more intensive phases of resource commodity production and accumulation. Relational frontier space is understood through the work of geographers such as Doreen Massey, who views the production of space as 'constituted though the practices of engagement and the powergeometries of relations'. In Laos, a twenty-first century resource frontier is being driven by new corporate investments in natural resources, and a supporting array of land reform programmes. The paper focuses on both the material and representational aspects of the production of the resource frontier, through policy and discourse analysis, and village level research in Laos' Khammouane province. By rethinking a dualist and hierarchical-scaled imaginary of frontier places, both rural people and local ecologies are shown to be key actors, in a complex, relational reproduction of frontier zones. An emerging Lao spatial and political assemblage - a form of 'frontier-neoliberalism' - is shown as producing dramatic changes in socio-natural landscapes, as well as new patterns of marginalisation and livelihood insecurity for a vulnerable rural population.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The Fate of the Forest: Developers, Destroyers and Defenders of the Amazon

TL;DR: The Fate of the Forest as mentioned in this paper explores the role of human hands in destroying -and saving - this vast, forested region, pivots on the murder of Chico Mendes, the legendary labor and environmental organizer assassinated after successful confrontations with big ranchers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reconfiguring Frontier Spaces: The territorialization of resource control

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore the emergence of frontier spaces, arguing that these are transitional, liminal spaces in which existing regimes of resource control are suspended, making way for new ones.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fragmented sovereignty: land reform and dispossession in Laos

TL;DR: In this article, the authors demonstrate how rural small holders' access to land depends on the ways in which property and political subjects have been produced, and how the institution's control over land does not represent or reflect pre-existing sovereignty.
Journal ArticleDOI

Taking Complexity in Food Systems Seriously: An Interdisciplinary Analysis

TL;DR: An interdisciplinary, triangulation analysis of four divergent conceptual frameworks relevant to diagnosing food insecurity in developing countries found notable tensions as well as synergistic interactions between agroecology, agricultural innovation systems, social–ecological systems, and political ecology.
Journal ArticleDOI

Plantation rubber, land grabbing and social-property transformation in southern Laos

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine a concession of 10,000 hectares by the central government of Laos to a Vietnamese corporation for extracting timber and planting rubber in the southern province of Attapeu.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

A Brief History of Neoliberalism

Journal ArticleDOI

Toward a relational economic geography

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that a paradigmatic shift is occurring in economic geography toward a relational economic geography, based on three propositions: from a structural perspective economic actors are situated in contexts of social and institutional relations, in dynamic perspective economic processes are path-dependent, constrained by history.
Journal ArticleDOI

Material worlds? Resource geographies and the `matter of nature':

TL;DR: In this article, the authors identify a set of analytical questions at the heart of resource geography and characterize the dominant approaches to these questions -the ''production of nature" and ''social construction of nature'' -as yielding diminishing returns.
Journal ArticleDOI

Law, Property, and the Geography of Violence: The Frontier, the Survey, and the Grid

TL;DR: Physical violence, whether realized or implied, is important to the legitimation, foundation, and operation of a Western property regime as discussed by the authors, and certain spatializations play a practical and ideological role at all these moments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rethinking relational economic geography

TL;DR: The authors argue that much of the work in this relational turn is relational only in a thematic sense, focusing on various themes of socio-spatial relations without theorizing sufficiently the nature of relationality and its manifestation through power relations and actor-specific practice.