Re-encountering resistance: Plantation activism and smallholder production in Thailand and Sarawak, Malaysia
Title | Re-encountering resistance: Plantation activism and smallholder production in Thailand and Sarawak, Malaysia |
Annotated Record | Annotated |
Year of Publication | 2004 |
Authors | Barney K |
Secondary Title | Asia Pacific Viewpoint |
Volume | 45 |
Issue | 3 |
Pagination | 325-339 |
Key themes | AgriculturalModernization, CivilSociety-Donors, Conversion-FoodSecurity, Dispossession-grabbing, FDI |
Abstract | The emergence of social and environmental movements against plantation forestry in Southeast Asia positions rural development against local displacement and environmental degradation. Multi-scaled NGO networks have been active in promoting the notion that rural people in Southeast Asia uniformly oppose plantation development. There are potential pitfalls in this heightened attention to resistance however, as it has often lapsed into essentialist notions of timeless indigenous agricultural practices, and unproblematic local allegiances to common property and conservation. An exclusive emphasis on resistance also offers little understanding of widespread smallholder participation in plantation production across the region. A useful method of approaching the complexity of local responses to plantation development is through the history of legal and informal resource tenure, within an analysis of rural political-economic restructuring. Drawing on research in Thailand and Sarawak, I suggest that a more nuanced appreciation of both the structural constraints and deployments of agency which characterise the enrolment of rural people into plantation commodity networks, opens up new spaces for analysis and political action, which supports a geographically embedded view of relations of power, rural livelihoods and environmental politics. |
URL | https://www.researchgate.net/publication/227512167_Re-Encountering_Resistance_Plantation_Activism_and_Smallholder_Production_in_Thailand_and_Sarawak_Malaysia |
Availability | Available for download |
Countries | Thailand |
Document Type | Journal Article |
Annotations
This article examines the complexity of local responses to plantation development in Thailand and Sarawak. It does so through a history of legal and informal resource tenure, within an analysis of rural political-economic restructuring. In looking at sites of smallholder participation in commercial tree-crop production, the author indicates a need to further problematize how we think about the relationship between local resistances and engagement in capitalist rural development, and globalization processes
- Agricultural modernisation: key ideas and debates relevant to land tenure security - Malaysia’s highly-modernist Vision 2020, In Sarawak, spatially takes form in rural development programmes, and resource mega-projects, including Borneo Pulp and Paper. In Thailand, there has been a boom in commercial tree plantations, especially eucalyptus, promoted by government schemes and private companies since the 1980s
- Land zoning, planning, conversion and food security - “Eucalyptus activism” emerged in rural Thailand in the early to mid 190s. There have been numerous instances of local people uprooting eucalyptus trees in the northeast, and organising resistance to local evictions from forest reserve areas. After the Re-Afforestation Act of 1992, different plantation space-making strategies were employed, for instance, land leasing or purchasing agreements, existing Forest Department tree planting initiatives, and contract agreements with large and small landowners. Meanwhile, plantation spaces in Sarawak are being promoted through the allocation of large and contiguous land concessions, which have continually brought the state and private sector into conflict with local people
- Civil society and donor engagement in land issues - Multi-scaled NGO networks have been active in promoting the notion that rural people in Southeast Asia uniformly oppose plantation development. Many environmental movements have tended to produce a view of widespread and deep local resistance to resource development projects. In Thailand, local people are increasingly able to contest displacements or eviction, in part through the committed efforts of a vigorous NGO sector. In opposing the BPP project, the local longhouse communities were aided by Native Sarawakian civil rights lawyers, and by a number of Sarawakian NGOs
The data used in the article, including the two cases of recent plantation development in Thailand and Sarewak, and the local responses that these have generated, have been collected during fieldwork over a 3-year period (2000-2003). The contributing research took place from June-August 2003. (Provided by Jin Jie)
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