The drama of the grabbed commons: anti-politics machine and local responses
Jean‐David Gerber, Tobias Haller
Abstract
This article explores the nexus between old and new commons, anti-politics, and Corporate Social Responsibility measures in the context of on-going land grabbing. Detailed case studies in Ghana, Malawi, Morocco, and Tanzania show that powerful discourses of development, women's empowerment, and wasteland productivity increase serve as anti-politics machines that hide the fact that winners are few and losers many. Despite differential bargaining power mediated by class, age, lineage, or gender, some actors manage to take advantage of the situation: contrary to the often used tragedy metaphor, we argue that we are faced with an open-ended ‘drama of the commons’ which is still unfolding.
Topics & Concepts
CommonsPoliticsTragedy of the commonsNexus (standard)EmpowermentContext (archaeology)DramaMetaphorSweatshopCorporate social responsibilityTragedy (event)Political sciencePower (physics)SociologyPolitical economyGender studiesPublic relationsSocial scienceLawGeographyPhysicsLiteratureLinguisticsPhilosophyComputer scienceEmbedded systemArtQuantum mechanicsArchaeologyAgriculture, Land Use, Rural DevelopmentInnovation and Socioeconomic DevelopmentGlobal trade, sustainability, and social impact