Affiliation:
1. University of Copenhagen astrid.andersen@anthro.ku.dk
Abstract
This article examines what economic growth and state versions of progress
have done to small and medium-scale farmers in an urban setting, in Arequipa
in southern Peru. The general reorganization of production, resources, and
labor in the Peruvian economy has generated a discursive move to reposition small
and medium-scale farmers as backward. This article analyzes how farmers struggle
to find their place within a neoliberal urban ecology where different conceptions of
what constitutes progress in contemporary Peru influence the landscape. Using an
analytical lens that takes material and organizational infrastructures and practices
into account, and situates these in specific historical processes, the article argues
that farmers within the urban landscape of Arequipa struggle to reclaim land and
water, and reassert a status that they experience to be losing. Such a historical focus
on material and organizational infrastructural arrangements, it is argued, can
open up for understanding how local and beyond-local processes tangle in complex
ways and are productive of new subjectivities; how relations are reconfigured
in neoliberal landscapes of progress and dispossession. Such an approach makes
evident how state and nonstate actors invest affects, interests, and desires differently
within a given landscape.
Cited by
11 articles.
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