Litcius/Paper detail

Agrarian struggle and food system injustice in the Anglo-Caribbean: centering social reproduction by (re)turning to Creft and Fanon

Tessa Barry, Levi Gahman

2020Human Geography16 citationsDOI

Abstract

This piece offers a critical commentary on the historical-systemic marginalization and food system injustice being experienced by women farmers, agro-producers, and cottage industry owners in the Caribbean. In doing so, we provide an overview of the structural barriers and systemic negligence rural working-class and cash-poor women across the Anglo-Caribbean face as a result of the ongoing trajectories of colonialism, neoliberal logics, and patriarchal norms. In addition, the piece details the disproportionate amount of (devalued) socially reproductive labor women perform within the agrarian Majority World. We end by proposing that the radical potentials, emancipatory praxis, and clarion calls for transformative change offered by the region’s very own Jacqueline Creft and Frantz Fanon are revolutionary voices to pay heed to with respect to advancing a sustainable and (gender) just Caribbean future.

Topics & Concepts

InjusticePraxisTransformative learningAgrarian societyColonialismReproductionSociologyGender studiesOppressionSubalternNeoliberalism (international relations)Political scienceEnvironmental ethicsPolitical economyLawHistoryPoliticsAgricultureEcologyPedagogyArchaeologyBiologyPhilosophyAgriculture, Land Use, Rural DevelopmentCaribbean history, culture, and politicsMicrofinance and Financial Inclusion