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“Much in Blood and Money”: Necropolitical Ecology on the Margins of the Uganda Protectorate
Authors:Connor Joseph Cavanagh  David Himmelfarb
Affiliation:1. Department of International Environment and Development Studies (Noragric), Norwegian University of Life Sciences, ?s, Norway;2. Center for Integrative Conservation Research, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, USA
Abstract:Increasingly, political ecologists invoke the concept of “green grabbing” to refer to the ways in which processes of accumulation by dispossession articulate with various imperatives for environmental protection. This paper traces these contemporary processes to their roots in the colonial era, focusing on how dispossession in the name of environmental protection intersects with complex historical geographies of state formation and internal territorialisation. Drawing upon the case of Mount Elgon in Britain's Uganda Protectorate, in particular, we reconstruct the ways in which the interrelated “birth” of both conservation and transcontinental agrarian markets were intimately connected to the emergence and normalisation of the colonial state itself. In doing so, we propose the term necropolitical ecology as a framework to encompass the ways in which contemporary “green grabs” partially emerge from racialised modes of colonial appropriation, the violence of which often still lingers in agencies and institutions of environmental governance in the contemporary postcolony.
Keywords:territorialisation  primitive accumulation  necropolitics  colonialism  political ecology  conservation
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