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Geographies of precarity and violence in the Kurdish kolberi underground economy
Institution:1. Department of Geography and the Environment, University of Texas at Austin, 1 University Station A3100, Austin, TX, 78712, United States;2. Department of International Development Studies, Dalhousie University, Marion McCain Building, 6135 University Ave., PO Box 15000, Halifax, NS, Canada, B3H 4R2;3. Centro de Investigaciones y Estudios Superiores en Antropología Social (CIESAS) Sede Occidente, Av España 1359, Moderna, 44190, Guadalajara, Jal, Mexico;4. Department of Geography, Texas State University, 601 University Dr, San Marcos, TX, 78666, United States
Abstract:This paper investigates the precarious lives of the Kurdish kolbers, underground laborers who transport cargo on their backs across Iran's border with Iraq. Throughout their arduous journeys, kolbers experience various forms of violence, including direct shooting by border guards. Findings from interviews with the kolbers indicate that kolberi, a strenuous, dangerous, precarious type of labor, is a response to pervasive unemployment in Iranian Kurdistan (Rojhelat), and a long-term consequence of the Iranian state's systematic economic disinvestment in the Kurdish region. Although kolbers assert agency within their labor at localized scales, the social organization of kolberi is a reaction to the Iranian state's biopolitical strategies of economic disinvestment and violence. Drawing on a biopolitical framework, we illustrate the analytical interconnections among the economic marginalization of Rojhelat, violence against the kolbers, and the kolbers' precarious lives. The article offers ideas for future research that come out of our examination of the complexities of kolberi—an examination that demonstrates the importance of incorporating political-economic, ethno-territorial, and biopolitical factors in analyses of underground border exchanges and precarious marginalized lives.
Keywords:Kolber  Underground economy  Precarity  Violence  Biopolitics  Borders  Borderlands  Kurds  Kurdistan  Iran
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