‘Tradescapes’ in the forest: framing infrastructure’s relation to territory, commodities, and flows

Abstract

Pressure to facilitate the flow of commodities and capital across global and national markets has translated into narratives and programs prioritizing integration and development of forested regions. The 2009 World Bank Development Report argues that to reduce distance, infrastructure development is crucial. The infrastructure imperative, however, reworks a broader array of investment flows, property regimes, forest cover, and socio-political rights across scales as it drives increases in the speed of commodity extraction, production, mobility, and consumption. With illustrations from Amazonia and Selva Maya, the paper proposes ‘tradescapes’ as a useful framework to analyze infrastructure projects as part of multi-scalar mega-corridor networks and financial flows. Tradescapes transform relations between society, territory, and environment, with implications for infrastructure governance, resilience, and sustainability.

Publication Type
Journal Article
Authors
Pilar Delpino Marimón
Denise Humphreys Bebbington, Clark University
Anthony J Bebbington
Laura A Sauls
Nicholas Cuba, Clark University
Avecita Chicchon
Susanna Hecht
John Rogan, Clark University
Rebecca Ray, Boston University
Oscar Diaz
Susan Kandel, Fundacion PRISMA
Tracey Osborne, University of California, Merced
Madelyn Rivera
Viviana Zalles, University of Maryland
Date
Journal
Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability
Share

Related Content