Forests, food, and fuel in the tropics: the uneven social and ecological consequences of the emerging political economy of biofuels

被引:96
|
作者
Dauvergne, Peter [1 ]
Neville, Kate J. [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ British Columbia, Liu Inst Global Issues, Vancouver, BC V5Z 1M9, Canada
[2] Univ British Columbia, Dept Polit Sci, Vancouver, BC V5Z 1M9, Canada
来源
JOURNAL OF PEASANT STUDIES | 2010年 / 37卷 / 04期
关键词
biofuel alliances; global political economy; institutions; state-society relations; sustainability; RURAL-DEVELOPMENT; NORTH-SOUTH; PALM OIL; LAND-USE; CARBON; JATROPHA; PROPERTY; PEASANT; AFRICA; BRAZIL;
D O I
10.1080/03066150.2010.512451
中图分类号
Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
030303 ;
摘要
The global political economy of biofuels emerging since 2007 appears set to intensify inequalities among the countries and rural peoples of the global South. Looking through a global political economy lens, this paper analyses the consequences of proliferating biofuel alliances among multinational corporations, governments, and domestic producers. Since many major biofuel feedstocks-such as sugar, oil palm, and soy-are already entrenched in industrial agricultural and forestry production systems, the authors extrapolate from patterns of production for these crops to bolster their argument that state capacities, the timing of market entry, existing institutions, and historical state-society land tenure relations will particularly affect the potential consequences of further biofuel development. Although the impacts of biofuels vary by region and feedstock, and although some agrarian communities in some countries of the global South are poised to benefit, the analysis suggests that already-vulnerable people and communities will bear a disproportionate share of the costs of biofuel development, particularly for biofuels from crops already embedded in industrial production systems. A core reason, this paper argues, is that the emerging biofuel alliances are reinforcing processes and structures that increase pressures on the ecological integrity of tropical forests and further wrest control of resources from subsistence farmers, indigenous peoples, and people with insecure land rights. Even the development of so-called 'sustainable' biofuels looks set to displace livelihoods and reinforce and extend previous waves of hardship for such marginalised peoples.
引用
收藏
页码:631 / 660
页数:30
相关论文
共 34 条
  • [1] Political economy of climate change, ecological destruction and uneven development
    O'Hara, Phillip Anthony
    ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS, 2009, 69 (02) : 223 - 234
  • [2] The Political Economy of "Food Security" and Trade: Uneven and Combined Dependency
    Otero, Gerardo
    Pechlaner, Gabriela
    Guercan, Efe Can
    RURAL SOCIOLOGY, 2013, 78 (03) : 263 - 289
  • [3] Forests, Fuel, or Food? Competing Coalitions and Biofuels Policy Making in the Philippines
    Montefrio, Marvin Joseph F.
    Sonnenfeld, David A.
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENT & DEVELOPMENT, 2011, 20 (01): : 27 - 49
  • [4] Future forests: Forecasting social and ecological consequences of genetic engineering
    Bailey, C
    Sinclair, PR
    Dubois, MR
    SOCIETY & NATURAL RESOURCES, 2004, 17 (07) : 641 - 650
  • [5] The evolutionary and ecological consequences of animal social networks: emerging issues
    Kurvers, Ralf H. J. M.
    Krause, Jens
    Croft, Darren P.
    Wilson, Alexander D. M.
    Wolf, Max
    TRENDS IN ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION, 2014, 29 (06) : 326 - 335
  • [6] Food System Transformation: Integrating a Political-Economy and Social-Ecological Approach to Regime Shifts
    Pereira, Laura M.
    Drimie, Scott
    Maciejewski, Kristi
    Tonissen, Patrick Bon
    Biggs, Reinette
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH, 2020, 17 (04)
  • [7] The political economy of social inequalities: Consequences for health and quality of life
    Robinson, WI
    CONTEMPORARY SOCIOLOGY-A JOURNAL OF REVIEWS, 2002, 31 (06) : 685 - 687
  • [8] The political economy of social inequalities: consequences for health and quality of life
    Himmelstein, DU
    SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE, 2002, 55 (07) : 1279 - 1280
  • [9] Political Economy: Capturing the Wholeness of Social Relations and Ecological Contexts
    Ito, Takeshi
    JOURNAL OF ASIAN STUDIES, 2021, 80 (02): : 399 - 405
  • [10] Capitalism, food, and social movements: The political economy of food system transformation
    Holt-Gimenez, Eric
    JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURE FOOD SYSTEMS AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT, 2019, 9 : 23 - 35