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Journal Article

Citation

Ballvé T. J. Agrar. Change 2019; 19(2): 211-224.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/joac.12300

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Based on historical and ethnographic research conducted in a region of northwest Colombia and drawing on the stories of novelist Gabriel García Márquez, this article develops the analytical concept of "narco-frontiers" to help disentangle the confusing political economy of agrarian spaces affected by the violence of the drug war. As socially produced spaces, narco-frontiers emerge through the convergence of four interlocking processes: uneven development, internal colonialism, political violence, and narco-fuelled dispossession. Although often depicted as "ungovernable" or "stateless" spaces, narco-frontiers are wracked by extra-legal regimes of rule in which the state is simply one actor among others. With the drug trade inducing violent agrarian change all over the world--from Colombia to Afghanistan, Burma to Central America--this article offers a spatial-historical framework for understanding these dramatic transformations.


Language: en

Keywords

Colombia; drugs; frontiers; García Márquez; internal colonialism; uneven development

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