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Journal Article

Citation

Gilbert DE. J. Agrar. Change 2017; 18(2): 229-248.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/joac.12227

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

In Ecuador's Yasuní rainforests and the lived history of the Waorani that live there, the commodification of first rubber and then oil shaped territorialization into particularly violent form. The formative role of rubber production in the 19th century involved local despots' imposition of a regime of violence. Reacting to this violent capitalist system, individual Waorani forged new socio-spatial territories through violence with rubber slavers and cooperation with the Taromenane, a people who continue to live in isolation. Today, an oil complex exerts control to bring the end of Yasuní's commodity frontier, even while the Waorani Nation and Taromenane hold legal rights to parts of the forests. In this article, I analyse how rubber and oil exploitation has unfolded as capitalist territorial violence, spurring Waorani and Taromenane social expressions and political mobilizations that are at times violent, but primarily not.


Language: en

Keywords

violence; commodity frontiers; territorialization; Yasuní rainforests

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