Overflowing the Channels of the Left
Global Accumulation and Communal Agro-Ecology as Competing Projects of Governance in Coastal El Salvador
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5195/jwsr.2024.1167Keywords:
Environmental Movements, World-Systems Analysis, State-Movement Interactions, Latin America, Agro-Ecology and Food SovereigntyAbstract
In 2012, the “climate hotspot” region of the “Bajo Lempa” in El Salvador was the recipient of a Millennium Challenge Account (MCA) Fund granted by the United States and administered by the leftist FMLN political party to bring “sustainable development” to the region. Local organizations initially pursued funding opportunities through this mega-project though their efforts were unsuccessful, thereby undercutting subsequent campaigns to resist the project for its environmental risks. Remaining pockets of resistance were undermined by gang violence directed at key community leaders, seemingly at the behest of local oligarchs. Thus, an interlocking web of political-economic obstacles blocked communal agency to forge alternative climate futures. By analytically foregrounding the meso-level relationships between community-based environmental movements and leftist-controlled state institutions subordinated to global logics of accumulation, I distill the contradictions inherent to anthropocentric state forms, and the inability of the Latin American left to incorporate environmental concerns into their projects of governance. Ultimately, I argue that despite their inability to halt the MCA, the political and agro-ecological practices of communities in the Bajo Lempa “overflow” channels of the Latin American left and instantiate communal projects of resource governance as horizons of climate change adaptation, and radically democratic forms of governing social life.
References
Abrams, Phillip. 1988. “Notes on the Difficulty of Studying the State.” Journal of Historical Sociology 1 (1): 58–89.
Almeida, Paul. 2014. Mobilizing Democracy: Globalization and Citizen Protest. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
Almeida, Paul and Amalia Perez Martin. 2022. Collective Resistance to Neoliberalism. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
______. 2007. “Defensive Mobilization: Popular Movements against Economic Adjustment Policies in Latin America,” Latin American Perspectives 34 (3), 123–139.
______. 2008. Waves of Protest: Popular Struggle in El Salvador, 1925–2005. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
Alvarez, Sonia E. 1999. “Advocating Feminism: The Latin American Feminist NGO ‘Boom.’” International Feminist Journal of Politics 1(2): 181–209.
______. 2009. “Beyond NGO-ization? Reflections from Latin America.” Development 52(2): 175–189.
Alvarez, Sonia E., Evelina Dagnino, and Arturo Escobar, eds. 1998. Cultures of Politics, Politics of Cultures: Re-Visioning Latin American Social Movements. Boulder: Westview Press.
Alvarez, Sonia E., Jeffrey W. Rubin, Millie Thayer, Gianpaolo Baiocchi, and Augstin Lao-Montes, eds. 2017. Beyond Civil Society: Activism, Participation, and Protest in Latin America. Durham: Duke University Press.
Amigos de la Tierra. 2007. La Gestión Comunitaria de los Bosques: Entre la Resistencia y las Propuestas de Uso Sustentable. Santiago: Impresos Socias Ltda. Chile.
Arias, Enrique Desmond. 2017. Criminal Enterprises and Governance in Latin America and the Caribbean. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Baiocchi, Gianpaolo and Ernesto Ganuza. 2017. Popular Democracy. The Paradox of Participation. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
Bamyeh, Mohammed. Anarchy as Order: The History and Future of Civic Humanity. Rowman and Littlefield Publishers, Inc. 2009.
______. 2019. “Global Epistemology.” Pp. 189–198 in The Global Studies Reader, edited by
Manfred B. Steger. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Bruno, Andy. 2017. The Nature of Soviet Power: An Arctic Environmental History. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Cameron, Maxwell A., Eric Hershberg and Kenneth E. Sharpe. 2012. New Institutions for Participatory Democracy in Latin America: Voice and Consequence. Palgrave MacMillan: New York.
Cartagena Cruz, Rafael E. 2015. “Environmental Conflicts and Social Movements in Postwar El Salvador.” Pp. 237–254 in Handbook of Social Movements Across Latin America, edited by Almeida, Paul and Allen Cordero Ulate. Springer Nature: Dordrecht.
Ching, Erik. 2018. “El Salvador since 1840.” Pp. in The Oxford Handbook of Central America, edited by Robert H. Holden. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Davenport, Michael. 2015. How Social Movements Die: Repression and Demobilization of the Republic of New Africa. New York: Cambridge University Press.
Dávila Medina, Maria Inés. 2019. Dinámica de la producción de azúcar en El Salvador. San Salvador: Voces en la Frontera Ediciones.
Dávila Medina, Maria Inés, and Jose Roberto Acosta. 2020. Agricultura y Alimentación en El Salvador. San Salvador: Imagen Grafica El Salvador S.A de C.V.
Ellner, Steve, ed. 2020. Latin America’s Pink Tide: Breakthroughs and Shortcomings. Lanham: Rowman and Littlefield.
______. 2021. Latin American Extractivism: Dependency, Resource Nationalism, and Resistance in Broad Perspective. Lanham: Rowman and Littlefield.
Ellner, Steve and Ronaldo Munck, and Kyla Sanker, eds. 2022. Latin American Social Movements and Progressive Governments: Creative Tensions and Convergence. Lanham: Rowman and Littlefield.
Fenelon, James and Jennifer Alford. 2021. “Envisioning Indigenous Models for Social and Ecological Change in the Anthropocene.” Journal of World-Systems Research 26(2): 372–399.
Fisher, Dana R. and Andrew K. Jorgenson. 2019. “Ending the Stalemate: Toward a Theory of the Anthro-Shift.” Sociological Theory 37(4): 342–362.
Fung, Archon and Erik Olin-Wright. 2001. “Deepening Democracy: Innovations in Empowered Participatory Governance.” Politics & Society 29(1): 5–41.
Goldfrank, Benjamin. 2017. “The Latin American Left’s Missed Opportunity to Deepen Democracy.” Journal of International Affairs 71(1): 147–160.
Gonzalez, Mike. 2019. The Ebb of the Pink Tide: The Decline of the Left in Latin America. London: Pluto Press.
Gudynas, Eduardo. 2021. Extractivisms: Politics, Economy, and Ecology. Hallifax: Fernwood Publishing.
Hagene, Turid and Inigo Gonzales-Fuente. 2016. “Deep Politics: Community Adaptations to Political Clientelism in Twenty-First Century Mexico.” Latin American Research Review, 51(2): 3–23.
Harvey, David. 2005. A Brief History of Neoliberalism. New York: Oxford University Press.
Holston, James. 2007. Insurgent Citizenship: Disjunctions of Democracy and Modernity in Brazil. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
Krupa, Christopher, and David Nugent. 2015. State Theory and Andean Politics: New Approaches to the Study of Rule. University of Pennsylvania Press: Philadelphia.
Mann, Michael. 1984. “The Autonomous Power of the State: Its Origins, Mechanisms, and Results.” European Journal of Sociology 25: 185–213.
Markoff, John. 2019. “How Democracy Never Worked as Planned (and Perhaps a Good Thing It Didn’t.” Sociological Theory 37(2): 184–208.
Markoff, John, Hillary Lazar, Benjamin S. Case, and Daniel P. Burridge. 2024. The Anarchist Turn in Twenty First Century Left Wing Activism. Cambridge University Press: Cambridge.
Michels, Robert. 2001 [1911]. Political Parties: A Sociological Study of the Oligarchic Tendencies of Modern Political Democracy. Translated by Eden and Cedar Paul. Ontario: Batoche Books.
Montgomery, Tommie Sue. 1995. Revolution in El Salvador: From Civil Strife to Civil Peace. Boulder: Westview Press.
Motta, Sara C. 2013. “Reinventing the Lefts in Latin America: Critical Perspectives from Below.” Latin American Perspectives 40(4): 5–18.
Mudge, Stephanie L. 2018. Leftism Reinvented: Western Parties from Socialism to Neoliberalism. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
Navarro, Ricardo. 2017. El Cambio Climático: La Crisis de un Sistema (La Lucha por la Sobrevivencia). San Salvador: Imagen Grafica El Salvador S.A de C.V.
Nueva Esperanza Support Group. 1999. Like Gold in the Fire: Voices of Hope from El Salvador: War, Exile, and Return, 1974–1999. Nottingham: Russell Press.
Patel, Raj. 2009. “Food Sovereignty.” The Journal of Peasant Studies 36(3): 663–706.
Prevost, Gary, Carlos Oliva Campos, and Harry E. Vanden, eds. 2012. Social Movements and Leftist Governments in Latin America: Confrontation or Co-optation? London: Zed Books.
Robinson, William I. 2008. Latin America and Global Capitalism: A Critical Globalization Perspective. Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press.
Rossi, Federico M. 2017. The Poor’s Struggle for Political Participation: The Piquetero Movement in Argentina. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Silva, Eduardo. 2009. Challenging Neoliberalism in Latin America. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Smith, Jackie and Dawn Wiest. 2012. Social Movements in the World System: The Politics of Crisis and Transformation. New York: Russell Sage Foundation.
Smith, Richard. 2015. “China’s Communist-Capitalist Ecological Apocalypse.” Real World Economics Review 71: 19–63.
Spalding, Rose. 2018. “From the Streets to the Chamber: Social Movements and the Mining Ban in El Salvador.” European Review of Latin American and Caribbean Studies. 106: 47–74.
Sprenkels, Ralph. 2018. After Insurgency: Revolution and Electoral Politics in El Salvador. Notre Dame: Notre Dame University Press.
Stahler-Sholk, Harry E. Vanden, and Marc Becker, eds. Rethinking Latin American Social Movements: Radical Action from Below. Rowman & Littlefield: 2014.
Tilley, Virginia. 2005. Seeing Indians: A Study of Race, Nation, and Power in El Salvador. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.
Thayer, Milly. 2017. “The ‘Gray Zone’ Between Movements and Markets: Brazilian Feminists and the International Aid Chain,” Pp. in Beyond Civil Society: Activism, Participation, and Protest in Latin America, edited by Sonia E. Alvarez, Jeffrey W. Rubin, Millie Thayer, Gianpaolo Baiocchi, and Agustín Laó-Montes. Durham: Duke University Press.
Voices on the Border. 2014. “Desarrollo del Turismo en la Bahia de Jiquilisco,” San Salvador: Imagen Grafica El Salvador S.A de C.V.
Wolf, Sonja. 2017. Mano Dura: The Politics of Gang Control in El Salvador. Austin: University of Texas Press.
Zibechi, Raul. 2010. Cartographies of Latin American Social Movements: Territories in Resistance. Oakland: AK Press.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2024 Daniel Patrick Burridge
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms:
- The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.
- Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.
- The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:
- Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;
- The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.
- Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a prepublication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.
- Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.
- The Author represents and warrants that:
- the Work is the Author’s original work;
- the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;
- the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;
- the Work has not previously been published;
- the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; and
- the Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter.
- The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
Revised 7/16/2018. Revision Description: Removed outdated link.