Palm kernel expeller (PKE), a by-product of the palm oil production process in Indonesia, has evo... more Palm kernel expeller (PKE), a by-product of the palm oil production process in Indonesia, has evolved into a billion-dollar export ‘flex’ commodity to feed cows in intensified dairy production in New Zealand. As the PKE trade grew in New Zealand, the dairy industry became a transnational behemoth and a leading global exporter. Through our examination of PKE, an understudied commodity, we reveal the ways that ecological degradation to local, regional, and world-ecologies are exacerbated and intertwined. This paper argues that neoliberalisation of regulatory and trade policy, both within and between the two countries, laid the groundwork for the growth of the ecologically destructive palm oil operations of Indonesia as well as the intensified dairy operations in New Zealand, both of which rely on dispossession of Indigenous lands. Our theorisation builds on the flex commodity literature by analyzing the ways PKE became an ‘environmental fix’ and part of a transnational waste regime linking two semiperipheral regions. This environmental fix for the dairy industry temporarily limits the negative impacts of climate change induced drought. The world-ecology(ies) of such ‘fixes’ is becoming increasingly urgent and increasingly tenuous in the face of climate change. FREE DOWNLOAD UNTIL FEB 15, 2024
This article examines neoliberal leverage, states and ‘deep marketization’ in relation to resourc... more This article examines neoliberal leverage, states and ‘deep marketization’ in relation to resource extraction in Indonesia. The concept of ‘altered’ state developmentalism within a world-historical analysis of the semi-peripheral zone of the world-economy is introduced to address how much and in what ways resource extraction persists and even continues to expands. While most theories of development assume either that natural resource extraction will gradually fade or that the ‘curse’ of natural resources requires institutional reform, Indonesia’s ‘extractive regime’ persistently and under different political systems relies on extraction of land, forest, and mineral resources. Altered state developmentalism occurs, from this perspective, within a world-historical cycle of resource nationalism (CRN) as US hegemony declines. In contrast to the A first CRN’s put more emphasis on nationalizing ownership, e for progressive redistribution aims and industrial transformation. In contrast to the first CRN's emphasis on nationalizing ownership, empirical evidence from the oil, mining, and oil palm sectors illustrate how the advance of neoliberalism is tempered in the second CRN by altered developmentalism that aspires for growth and poverty reduction in a more market-oriented direction pushed by neoliberal leverage. While accommodating some pressures for land rights against the expansion of extractive frontiers, the overall thrust expands the conditions for yet more deep marketization.
Predominant analyses of energy offer insufficient theoretical and political economic insight into... more Predominant analyses of energy offer insufficient theoretical and political economic insight into the persistence of coal and other fossil fuels. The dominant narrative of coal powering the Industrial Revolution and Great Britain’s world dominance in the 19th century giving way to a US and oil-dominated 20th century is marred by teleological assumptions. The key assumption that a complete energy ‘transition’ will occur leads some to conceive of a renewable energy-dominated 21st century led by China. After critiquing the teleological assumptions of modernization, ecological modernization, energetics, and even world-systems analysis of energy ‘transition’, this paper offers a world-systems perspective on the ‘raw’ materialism of coal. Examining the material characteristics of coal and the unequal structure of the world-economy, the paper uses long term data from governmental and private sources to reveal the lack of transition as new sources of energy are added. Increases in coal consumption in China and India as they have ascended in the capitalist world-economy have more than offset leveling and decline in some core nations. A true global peak and decline (let alone full substitution) in energy generally and coal specifically has never happened. The future need not repeat the past, but technical, policy and movement approaches will not get far without addressing the structural imperatives of capitalist growth and the uneven power structures and processes of long term change of the world-system.
In the midst of activist, citizen, and policymaker concerns about and advocacy for the end of coa... more In the midst of activist, citizen, and policymaker concerns about and advocacy for the end of coal as a fuel, this chapter takes a long-term historical-materialist perspective on energy and society relations. The historical evolution of coal commodity chains from mines in global peripheries to consumption in world-system cores through four periods of attempted and real hegemonic ascent (British, US, Japanese, and Chinese) are addressed. This analysis from the nineteenth century to 2015 demonstrates that generative sectors based on coal helped drive economic ascent in all four of these cases. Further, coal remains critical for aspiring powers, notably China and India, to produce steel and electricity. China’s and India’s combined coal consumption drove a near doubling of global hard coal production between 2000 and 2015, despite declining coal use in the OECD countries. The medium-term future of coal is therefore far from certain, despite environmental costs and concerns.
Ecologically Unequal Exchange Environmental Injustice in Comparative and Historical Perspective, 2018
Bunker, Foster, and Moore all address the unjust manner in which dominant actors in the capitalis... more Bunker, Foster, and Moore all address the unjust manner in which dominant actors in the capitalist world-system simultaneously exploit labor and nonhuman or biophysical nature while undermining sustainability. In the context of recent, largely one-sided criticism of Moore by Foster, this chapter highlights fundamental agreements regarding ecologically unequal exchange across all three of these sociologists. Then, it unpacks distinctions regarding capitalism as causing degradation; nature’s ontology; epistemology and dialectical analysis; and possible futures that might overturn the current unsustainable situation. The conclusion reiterates the importance of Bunker’s foundational work, peripheral vantage point, dialectical view of socio-nature, and realistic future vision, partly based in his posthumously published The Snake with Golden Braids.
[click URL for free access to full text]
Introduction essay on ecologically unequal exchange in... more [click URL for free access to full text]
Introduction essay on ecologically unequal exchange in comparative perspective. Part of a special issue edited by R. Scott Frey, Paul K. Gellert, and Harry F. Dahms on unequal ecological exchange examines inequities between cores and peripheries in the global distribution of environmental goods and bads. These essays will help advance our thinking about environmental conflicts, and they include papers analyzing international trade in chocolate, palm oil, and coffee in addition to other contributions advancing theory about patterns of environmental inequalities in the world economic and political system. In addition, research articles explore the “renewable energy paradox” and the struggles over indigenous land in Bolivia.
Announcing New Issue of Journal of World-Systems Research
We are happy to announce the publicati... more Announcing New Issue of Journal of World-Systems Research
We are happy to announce the publication of the Summer/Fall 2017 issue of the Journal of World-Systems Research (http://jwsr.pitt.edu).
As the world faces deepening crises related to inequality, environmental degradation, and political polarization, this issue of the Journal of World-Systems Research offers analyses that can help readers better understand the long-term causes of today’s crises as we consider possible alternative policies that can enhance people’s well-being.
Environmental Conflict A special issue edited by R. Scott Frey, Paul K. Gellert, and Harry F. Dahms on unequal ecological exchange examines inequities between cores and peripheries in the global distribution of environmental goods and bads. These essays will help advance our thinking about environmental conflicts, and they include papers analyzing international trade in chocolate, palm oil, and coffee in addition to other contributions advancing theory about patterns of environmental inequalities in the world economic and political system. In addition, research articles explore the “renewable energy paradox” and the struggles over indigenous land in Bolivia.
Scholars often see resource nationalism as either a strategy to protect national interests or an ... more Scholars often see resource nationalism as either a strategy to protect national interests or an opportunistic tactic to take advantage of capitalist market upswings. However, resource nationalism is not solely a strategy for an oppressed or disadvantaged group to gain power or glean a greater share of a nation’s resource wealth. Examining the extractive peripheries of Bolivia and Indonesia at two distinct temporal junctures, we demonstrate how global power struggles affect both the possibilities for resource nationalism and the variegated forms it takes across time. Taking resource nationalism to be an action by state actors in extractive peripheries to gain both economically and politically and linking sites and moments of resource nationalism to world-systemic processes, we argue that resource nationalism is a cyclical process shaped by the strategies of hegemons and their challengers. In addition, we argue that resource nationalism tends to garner greater benefits for actors in extractive peripheries when ascending global powers provide them viable alternative markets for their raw materials.
Placing expansion of oil palm plantations in Indonesia in the context of the global land grab, th... more Placing expansion of oil palm plantations in Indonesia in the context of the global land grab, this paper analyzes the contemporary extent and early historical periods of plantation expansion via the theory of accumulation by dispossession (ABD). After reviewing the empirical debate about the land grab, this paper examines the importance of ABD to understand the land grabs in general and for oil palm plantations in Indonesia in par- ticular. Rather than a new phenomenon of the last four decades of neoli- beralism, ABD has a history of several centuries. Building on historical understanding of ABD, this paper applies the theory to the Indonesian oil palm case, making the case that the multiple and uncertain sequences of engagement with oil palm expansion are reflective of a broader struggle against dispossession.
The Quest for Legal Certainty and the Reorganization
of Power: Struggles over Forest Law, Permits... more The Quest for Legal Certainty and the Reorganization of Power: Struggles over Forest Law, Permits, and Rights in Indonesia
PAUL K. GELLERT AND ANDIKO
Amid the rapid expansion of oil palm plantations, the Indonesian Ministry of Forestry finds its authority over the forested areas (kawasan hutan) under pressure and continues to pursue strategies to legally maintain the areas within its jurisdiction. Combining insights from legal studies with political economy, this article applies the concept of “political forests” to contemporary contestations and the development of “rule of law” in relation to Indonesia’s forested areas. Establishing legal certainty and “rule of law” are widely asserted to be important but never fully achieved. Two cases demonstrate this: the first focuses on the negotiated resolution of overlapping permits in the kawasan hutan between the center and the region in Central Kalimantan Province. The second examines the maneuvers of the Ministry of Forestry to (re)assert its authority over kawasan hutan by classifying palm oil as a tree crop. The article concludes that the widespread quest for certainty and rule of law is quixotic because it ignores the realities of political economy, including social conflict, beneath the veneer of law.
Some of the most insightful work in the political economy of the world-system area has been produ... more Some of the most insightful work in the political economy of the world-system area has been produced by researchers whose extensive fieldwork offers them deep familiarity with people and locales. Few other methods are as useful to understand the impacts of structural change on daily life and the ways agents resist, alter, and shape emerging structures. Yet such structural fieldwork is marginalized by the over-reliance of pedagogical materials on social constructionist, social psychological, or interactionist perspectives and also in world-systems research and writing by the privileging of long durée historical or quantitative cross-national methods. This paper introduces the concept of structural fieldwork to describe a qualitative field methodology in which the researcher is self-consciously guided by considerations emerging out of macro- sociological theories. We identify four advantages of structural fieldwork: the illumination of power’s multiple dimensions; examination of agency and its boundaries or limitations within broad political and economic structures; attention to nuances of change and durability, spatial and temporal specificities, and processes of change and durability; and challenging and extending social theory. These advantages are illustrated in select examples from existing literature and by discussion of the two author’s fieldwork-based research. The paper concludes that explicit attention to fieldwork may strengthen political economy and world-systems research and also de-marginalize political economy informed by structural fieldwork.
Update : JCA has made my paper available for free download. Download it at http://www.tandfonline... more Update : JCA has made my paper available for free download. Download it at http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rjoc20/45/3
Based on ethnographic field research conducted in Jakarta, this article argues that there is a new ideology of development in Indonesia that is cosmopolitan, nostalgic and individualist. To understand the new ideology, a historical sociological perspective is taken to examine the nationalist period of anti-colonial struggle, the state developmentalist period of Soeharto’s New Order, and the neoliberal period since 1998. Two interrelated arguments are made. First, the ideology of development in Indonesia has changed from earlier nationalist understandings of Pancasila to a cosmopolitan neoliberal ideology based in a nostalgic nationalism. Second, a modernist Islamic perspective on secularism and Islam both supports and is supported by this ideological shift. These arguments are illuminated through two examples of the advance of cosmopolitan neoliberal ideology: optimism and education. Optimism is focused on individual integrity to redress Indonesia’s problems with corruption. Education is offered by optimists as the escalator to development. Empirically, the Indonesia Mengajar programme of sending young university graduates to teach elementary school in remote parts of the country is examined for its neo-modernisationist assumptions. The article concludes that this dominant ideology abandons earlier solidaristic forms of nationalism and holds little hope for addressing the vast structural inequalities in Indonesia.
In the last two decades, significant portions of US timberlands previously held by vertically int... more In the last two decades, significant portions of US timberlands previously held by vertically integrated corporations have been sold off to institutional investors (known as TIMOs and REITs). This article explains the causes as well as the social and ecological implications of this transformation through a multi-level analysis that combines macrostructural theories of financialization with the shareholder value conception of control in corporate governance. Bringing this integrated perspec- tive to bear on the industrial timber sector and its landownership practices illuminates both how financialization is built through specific institutional practices and how such practices are equally shaped by the broader structural pressures of financialization. By focusing on the so-called ‘real’ effects of financialization through shareholder value in a particular natural resource sector, we begin to outline the construction of an ecological political economy of financialization. We argue that an ecological political economy would address the broader effects of financialization on socio-ecological transformations.
This article proposes the concept of an extractive regime to understand Indonesia’s developmental... more This article proposes the concept of an extractive regime to understand Indonesia’s developmental trajectory from 1966 to 1998. The concept contributes to world-systems, globalization, and commodity-based approaches to understanding peripheral development. An extractive regime is defined by its reliance on extraction of multiple natural resources in the formation of an economic and political order that is also supported by global and regional forces. After elaborating the concept of an extractive regime, the article illustrates it through examination of Indonesia’s developmental trajectory from its formation in the post–World War II era to its firm establishment during Suharto’s New Order. Although a comprehensive study would necessitate attention to the full panoply of commodities, the study illustrates some of the workings of the extractive regime in the timber and fisheries sectors, which share spatial extensivity and other characteristics. The article concludes by considering the future of the extractive regime in Indonesia amid democratization and continued class domination and by offering suggestions for further application, specification, and extension of the extractive regime concept.
Scholars interested in the promotion of ‘‘good governance’’ and those interested in transnational... more Scholars interested in the promotion of ‘‘good governance’’ and those interested in transnational advocacy networks both are concerned with the potential power of external actors to alter domestic political structures. This article analyses the networks promoting neo- liberalisation and democratic practices in Indonesia’s forestry sector as rival transnational net- works. The analysis finds that the Asian economic crisis and collapse of the Suharto regime provided a political opening for alliances between the two rival networks that helped to bring down the ruling oligarchy in timber, but the power of domestic oligarchs controlling the sector remains strong. In brief, there are limits to the power of both external networks vis-a` -vis domestic power relations. Given the financial resources and constraints on non-governmental organisations, they may be unable to alter the deep structures of capitalist accumulation and distribution based in Indonesia’s forest resources.
File is AM (accepted manuscript) version.
For VOR (version of record) follow DOI link or request from me.
This paper shows how political strategies and negotiations influence the construction of the mark... more This paper shows how political strategies and negotiations influence the construction of the market linkages that form global commodity chains. It provides an account of how an oligopoly of timber-producing firms in the peripheral nation of Indonesia came to dominate the production and export of processed tropical plywood from 1985 to 1998. The oligopoly forged alliances with the state to gain domestic control over producers of the raw material and negotiated an external alliance with Japanese importers to penetrate that core market. Exposing processes of political influence can enrich global commodity chain analysis of market processes in the global political economy.
Palm kernel expeller (PKE), a by-product of the palm oil production process in Indonesia, has evo... more Palm kernel expeller (PKE), a by-product of the palm oil production process in Indonesia, has evolved into a billion-dollar export ‘flex’ commodity to feed cows in intensified dairy production in New Zealand. As the PKE trade grew in New Zealand, the dairy industry became a transnational behemoth and a leading global exporter. Through our examination of PKE, an understudied commodity, we reveal the ways that ecological degradation to local, regional, and world-ecologies are exacerbated and intertwined. This paper argues that neoliberalisation of regulatory and trade policy, both within and between the two countries, laid the groundwork for the growth of the ecologically destructive palm oil operations of Indonesia as well as the intensified dairy operations in New Zealand, both of which rely on dispossession of Indigenous lands. Our theorisation builds on the flex commodity literature by analyzing the ways PKE became an ‘environmental fix’ and part of a transnational waste regime linking two semiperipheral regions. This environmental fix for the dairy industry temporarily limits the negative impacts of climate change induced drought. The world-ecology(ies) of such ‘fixes’ is becoming increasingly urgent and increasingly tenuous in the face of climate change. FREE DOWNLOAD UNTIL FEB 15, 2024
This article examines neoliberal leverage, states and ‘deep marketization’ in relation to resourc... more This article examines neoliberal leverage, states and ‘deep marketization’ in relation to resource extraction in Indonesia. The concept of ‘altered’ state developmentalism within a world-historical analysis of the semi-peripheral zone of the world-economy is introduced to address how much and in what ways resource extraction persists and even continues to expands. While most theories of development assume either that natural resource extraction will gradually fade or that the ‘curse’ of natural resources requires institutional reform, Indonesia’s ‘extractive regime’ persistently and under different political systems relies on extraction of land, forest, and mineral resources. Altered state developmentalism occurs, from this perspective, within a world-historical cycle of resource nationalism (CRN) as US hegemony declines. In contrast to the A first CRN’s put more emphasis on nationalizing ownership, e for progressive redistribution aims and industrial transformation. In contrast to the first CRN's emphasis on nationalizing ownership, empirical evidence from the oil, mining, and oil palm sectors illustrate how the advance of neoliberalism is tempered in the second CRN by altered developmentalism that aspires for growth and poverty reduction in a more market-oriented direction pushed by neoliberal leverage. While accommodating some pressures for land rights against the expansion of extractive frontiers, the overall thrust expands the conditions for yet more deep marketization.
Predominant analyses of energy offer insufficient theoretical and political economic insight into... more Predominant analyses of energy offer insufficient theoretical and political economic insight into the persistence of coal and other fossil fuels. The dominant narrative of coal powering the Industrial Revolution and Great Britain’s world dominance in the 19th century giving way to a US and oil-dominated 20th century is marred by teleological assumptions. The key assumption that a complete energy ‘transition’ will occur leads some to conceive of a renewable energy-dominated 21st century led by China. After critiquing the teleological assumptions of modernization, ecological modernization, energetics, and even world-systems analysis of energy ‘transition’, this paper offers a world-systems perspective on the ‘raw’ materialism of coal. Examining the material characteristics of coal and the unequal structure of the world-economy, the paper uses long term data from governmental and private sources to reveal the lack of transition as new sources of energy are added. Increases in coal consumption in China and India as they have ascended in the capitalist world-economy have more than offset leveling and decline in some core nations. A true global peak and decline (let alone full substitution) in energy generally and coal specifically has never happened. The future need not repeat the past, but technical, policy and movement approaches will not get far without addressing the structural imperatives of capitalist growth and the uneven power structures and processes of long term change of the world-system.
In the midst of activist, citizen, and policymaker concerns about and advocacy for the end of coa... more In the midst of activist, citizen, and policymaker concerns about and advocacy for the end of coal as a fuel, this chapter takes a long-term historical-materialist perspective on energy and society relations. The historical evolution of coal commodity chains from mines in global peripheries to consumption in world-system cores through four periods of attempted and real hegemonic ascent (British, US, Japanese, and Chinese) are addressed. This analysis from the nineteenth century to 2015 demonstrates that generative sectors based on coal helped drive economic ascent in all four of these cases. Further, coal remains critical for aspiring powers, notably China and India, to produce steel and electricity. China’s and India’s combined coal consumption drove a near doubling of global hard coal production between 2000 and 2015, despite declining coal use in the OECD countries. The medium-term future of coal is therefore far from certain, despite environmental costs and concerns.
Ecologically Unequal Exchange Environmental Injustice in Comparative and Historical Perspective, 2018
Bunker, Foster, and Moore all address the unjust manner in which dominant actors in the capitalis... more Bunker, Foster, and Moore all address the unjust manner in which dominant actors in the capitalist world-system simultaneously exploit labor and nonhuman or biophysical nature while undermining sustainability. In the context of recent, largely one-sided criticism of Moore by Foster, this chapter highlights fundamental agreements regarding ecologically unequal exchange across all three of these sociologists. Then, it unpacks distinctions regarding capitalism as causing degradation; nature’s ontology; epistemology and dialectical analysis; and possible futures that might overturn the current unsustainable situation. The conclusion reiterates the importance of Bunker’s foundational work, peripheral vantage point, dialectical view of socio-nature, and realistic future vision, partly based in his posthumously published The Snake with Golden Braids.
[click URL for free access to full text]
Introduction essay on ecologically unequal exchange in... more [click URL for free access to full text]
Introduction essay on ecologically unequal exchange in comparative perspective. Part of a special issue edited by R. Scott Frey, Paul K. Gellert, and Harry F. Dahms on unequal ecological exchange examines inequities between cores and peripheries in the global distribution of environmental goods and bads. These essays will help advance our thinking about environmental conflicts, and they include papers analyzing international trade in chocolate, palm oil, and coffee in addition to other contributions advancing theory about patterns of environmental inequalities in the world economic and political system. In addition, research articles explore the “renewable energy paradox” and the struggles over indigenous land in Bolivia.
Announcing New Issue of Journal of World-Systems Research
We are happy to announce the publicati... more Announcing New Issue of Journal of World-Systems Research
We are happy to announce the publication of the Summer/Fall 2017 issue of the Journal of World-Systems Research (http://jwsr.pitt.edu).
As the world faces deepening crises related to inequality, environmental degradation, and political polarization, this issue of the Journal of World-Systems Research offers analyses that can help readers better understand the long-term causes of today’s crises as we consider possible alternative policies that can enhance people’s well-being.
Environmental Conflict A special issue edited by R. Scott Frey, Paul K. Gellert, and Harry F. Dahms on unequal ecological exchange examines inequities between cores and peripheries in the global distribution of environmental goods and bads. These essays will help advance our thinking about environmental conflicts, and they include papers analyzing international trade in chocolate, palm oil, and coffee in addition to other contributions advancing theory about patterns of environmental inequalities in the world economic and political system. In addition, research articles explore the “renewable energy paradox” and the struggles over indigenous land in Bolivia.
Scholars often see resource nationalism as either a strategy to protect national interests or an ... more Scholars often see resource nationalism as either a strategy to protect national interests or an opportunistic tactic to take advantage of capitalist market upswings. However, resource nationalism is not solely a strategy for an oppressed or disadvantaged group to gain power or glean a greater share of a nation’s resource wealth. Examining the extractive peripheries of Bolivia and Indonesia at two distinct temporal junctures, we demonstrate how global power struggles affect both the possibilities for resource nationalism and the variegated forms it takes across time. Taking resource nationalism to be an action by state actors in extractive peripheries to gain both economically and politically and linking sites and moments of resource nationalism to world-systemic processes, we argue that resource nationalism is a cyclical process shaped by the strategies of hegemons and their challengers. In addition, we argue that resource nationalism tends to garner greater benefits for actors in extractive peripheries when ascending global powers provide them viable alternative markets for their raw materials.
Placing expansion of oil palm plantations in Indonesia in the context of the global land grab, th... more Placing expansion of oil palm plantations in Indonesia in the context of the global land grab, this paper analyzes the contemporary extent and early historical periods of plantation expansion via the theory of accumulation by dispossession (ABD). After reviewing the empirical debate about the land grab, this paper examines the importance of ABD to understand the land grabs in general and for oil palm plantations in Indonesia in par- ticular. Rather than a new phenomenon of the last four decades of neoli- beralism, ABD has a history of several centuries. Building on historical understanding of ABD, this paper applies the theory to the Indonesian oil palm case, making the case that the multiple and uncertain sequences of engagement with oil palm expansion are reflective of a broader struggle against dispossession.
The Quest for Legal Certainty and the Reorganization
of Power: Struggles over Forest Law, Permits... more The Quest for Legal Certainty and the Reorganization of Power: Struggles over Forest Law, Permits, and Rights in Indonesia
PAUL K. GELLERT AND ANDIKO
Amid the rapid expansion of oil palm plantations, the Indonesian Ministry of Forestry finds its authority over the forested areas (kawasan hutan) under pressure and continues to pursue strategies to legally maintain the areas within its jurisdiction. Combining insights from legal studies with political economy, this article applies the concept of “political forests” to contemporary contestations and the development of “rule of law” in relation to Indonesia’s forested areas. Establishing legal certainty and “rule of law” are widely asserted to be important but never fully achieved. Two cases demonstrate this: the first focuses on the negotiated resolution of overlapping permits in the kawasan hutan between the center and the region in Central Kalimantan Province. The second examines the maneuvers of the Ministry of Forestry to (re)assert its authority over kawasan hutan by classifying palm oil as a tree crop. The article concludes that the widespread quest for certainty and rule of law is quixotic because it ignores the realities of political economy, including social conflict, beneath the veneer of law.
Some of the most insightful work in the political economy of the world-system area has been produ... more Some of the most insightful work in the political economy of the world-system area has been produced by researchers whose extensive fieldwork offers them deep familiarity with people and locales. Few other methods are as useful to understand the impacts of structural change on daily life and the ways agents resist, alter, and shape emerging structures. Yet such structural fieldwork is marginalized by the over-reliance of pedagogical materials on social constructionist, social psychological, or interactionist perspectives and also in world-systems research and writing by the privileging of long durée historical or quantitative cross-national methods. This paper introduces the concept of structural fieldwork to describe a qualitative field methodology in which the researcher is self-consciously guided by considerations emerging out of macro- sociological theories. We identify four advantages of structural fieldwork: the illumination of power’s multiple dimensions; examination of agency and its boundaries or limitations within broad political and economic structures; attention to nuances of change and durability, spatial and temporal specificities, and processes of change and durability; and challenging and extending social theory. These advantages are illustrated in select examples from existing literature and by discussion of the two author’s fieldwork-based research. The paper concludes that explicit attention to fieldwork may strengthen political economy and world-systems research and also de-marginalize political economy informed by structural fieldwork.
Update : JCA has made my paper available for free download. Download it at http://www.tandfonline... more Update : JCA has made my paper available for free download. Download it at http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rjoc20/45/3
Based on ethnographic field research conducted in Jakarta, this article argues that there is a new ideology of development in Indonesia that is cosmopolitan, nostalgic and individualist. To understand the new ideology, a historical sociological perspective is taken to examine the nationalist period of anti-colonial struggle, the state developmentalist period of Soeharto’s New Order, and the neoliberal period since 1998. Two interrelated arguments are made. First, the ideology of development in Indonesia has changed from earlier nationalist understandings of Pancasila to a cosmopolitan neoliberal ideology based in a nostalgic nationalism. Second, a modernist Islamic perspective on secularism and Islam both supports and is supported by this ideological shift. These arguments are illuminated through two examples of the advance of cosmopolitan neoliberal ideology: optimism and education. Optimism is focused on individual integrity to redress Indonesia’s problems with corruption. Education is offered by optimists as the escalator to development. Empirically, the Indonesia Mengajar programme of sending young university graduates to teach elementary school in remote parts of the country is examined for its neo-modernisationist assumptions. The article concludes that this dominant ideology abandons earlier solidaristic forms of nationalism and holds little hope for addressing the vast structural inequalities in Indonesia.
In the last two decades, significant portions of US timberlands previously held by vertically int... more In the last two decades, significant portions of US timberlands previously held by vertically integrated corporations have been sold off to institutional investors (known as TIMOs and REITs). This article explains the causes as well as the social and ecological implications of this transformation through a multi-level analysis that combines macrostructural theories of financialization with the shareholder value conception of control in corporate governance. Bringing this integrated perspec- tive to bear on the industrial timber sector and its landownership practices illuminates both how financialization is built through specific institutional practices and how such practices are equally shaped by the broader structural pressures of financialization. By focusing on the so-called ‘real’ effects of financialization through shareholder value in a particular natural resource sector, we begin to outline the construction of an ecological political economy of financialization. We argue that an ecological political economy would address the broader effects of financialization on socio-ecological transformations.
This article proposes the concept of an extractive regime to understand Indonesia’s developmental... more This article proposes the concept of an extractive regime to understand Indonesia’s developmental trajectory from 1966 to 1998. The concept contributes to world-systems, globalization, and commodity-based approaches to understanding peripheral development. An extractive regime is defined by its reliance on extraction of multiple natural resources in the formation of an economic and political order that is also supported by global and regional forces. After elaborating the concept of an extractive regime, the article illustrates it through examination of Indonesia’s developmental trajectory from its formation in the post–World War II era to its firm establishment during Suharto’s New Order. Although a comprehensive study would necessitate attention to the full panoply of commodities, the study illustrates some of the workings of the extractive regime in the timber and fisheries sectors, which share spatial extensivity and other characteristics. The article concludes by considering the future of the extractive regime in Indonesia amid democratization and continued class domination and by offering suggestions for further application, specification, and extension of the extractive regime concept.
Scholars interested in the promotion of ‘‘good governance’’ and those interested in transnational... more Scholars interested in the promotion of ‘‘good governance’’ and those interested in transnational advocacy networks both are concerned with the potential power of external actors to alter domestic political structures. This article analyses the networks promoting neo- liberalisation and democratic practices in Indonesia’s forestry sector as rival transnational net- works. The analysis finds that the Asian economic crisis and collapse of the Suharto regime provided a political opening for alliances between the two rival networks that helped to bring down the ruling oligarchy in timber, but the power of domestic oligarchs controlling the sector remains strong. In brief, there are limits to the power of both external networks vis-a` -vis domestic power relations. Given the financial resources and constraints on non-governmental organisations, they may be unable to alter the deep structures of capitalist accumulation and distribution based in Indonesia’s forest resources.
File is AM (accepted manuscript) version.
For VOR (version of record) follow DOI link or request from me.
This paper shows how political strategies and negotiations influence the construction of the mark... more This paper shows how political strategies and negotiations influence the construction of the market linkages that form global commodity chains. It provides an account of how an oligopoly of timber-producing firms in the peripheral nation of Indonesia came to dominate the production and export of processed tropical plywood from 1985 to 1998. The oligopoly forged alliances with the state to gain domestic control over producers of the raw material and negotiated an external alliance with Japanese importers to penetrate that core market. Exposing processes of political influence can enrich global commodity chain analysis of market processes in the global political economy.
At a time of societal urgency surrounding ecological crises from depleted fisheries to mineral ex... more At a time of societal urgency surrounding ecological crises from depleted fisheries to mineral extraction and potential pathways towards environmental and ecological justice, this book re-examines ecologically unequal exchange (EUE) from a historical and comparative perspective. The theory of ecologically unequal exchange posits that core or northern consumption and capital accumulation is based on peripheral or southern environmental degradation and extraction. In other words, structures of social and environmental inequality between the Global North and Global South are founded in the extraction of materials from, as well as displacement of waste to, the South. This volume represents a set of tightly interlinked papers with the aim to assess ecologically unequal exchange and to move it forward. Chapters are organised into three main sections: theoretical foundations and critical reflections on ecologically unequal exchange; empirical research on mining, deforestation, fisheries, and the like; and strategies for responding to the adverse consequences associated with unequal ecological exchange. Scholars as well as advanced undergraduate and graduate students will benefit from the spirited re-evaluation and extension of ecologically unequal exchange theory, research, and praxis.
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Papers by Paul Gellert
Introduction essay on ecologically unequal exchange in comparative perspective. Part of a special issue edited by R. Scott Frey, Paul K. Gellert, and Harry F. Dahms on unequal ecological exchange examines inequities between cores and peripheries in the global distribution of environmental goods and bads. These essays will help advance our thinking about environmental conflicts, and they include papers analyzing international trade in chocolate, palm oil, and coffee in addition to other contributions advancing theory about patterns of environmental inequalities in the world economic and political system. In addition, research articles explore the “renewable energy paradox” and the struggles over indigenous land in Bolivia.
We are happy to announce the publication of the Summer/Fall 2017 issue of the Journal of World-Systems Research (http://jwsr.pitt.edu).
As the world faces deepening crises related to inequality, environmental degradation, and political polarization, this issue of the Journal of World-Systems Research offers analyses that can help readers better understand the long-term causes of today’s crises as we consider possible alternative policies that can enhance people’s well-being.
Environmental Conflict
A special issue edited by R. Scott Frey, Paul K. Gellert, and Harry F. Dahms on unequal ecological exchange examines inequities between cores and peripheries in the global distribution of environmental goods and bads. These essays will help advance our thinking about environmental conflicts, and they include papers analyzing international trade in chocolate, palm oil, and coffee in addition to other contributions advancing theory about patterns of environmental inequalities in the world economic and political system. In addition, research articles explore the “renewable energy paradox” and the struggles over indigenous land in Bolivia.
of Power: Struggles over Forest Law, Permits, and
Rights in Indonesia
PAUL K. GELLERT AND ANDIKO
Amid the rapid expansion of oil palm plantations, the Indonesian Ministry of Forestry
finds its authority over the forested areas (kawasan hutan) under pressure and continues
to pursue strategies to legally maintain the areas within its jurisdiction. Combining insights
from legal studies with political economy, this article applies the concept of “political
forests” to contemporary contestations and the development of “rule of law” in
relation to Indonesia’s forested areas. Establishing legal certainty and “rule of law” are
widely asserted to be important but never fully achieved. Two cases demonstrate this:
the first focuses on the negotiated resolution of overlapping permits in the kawasan
hutan between the center and the region in Central Kalimantan Province. The second
examines the maneuvers of the Ministry of Forestry to (re)assert its authority over
kawasan hutan by classifying palm oil as a tree crop. The article concludes that the widespread
quest for certainty and rule of law is quixotic because it ignores the realities of political
economy, including social conflict, beneath the veneer of law.
Based on ethnographic field research conducted in Jakarta, this article argues that there is a new ideology of development in Indonesia that is cosmopolitan, nostalgic and individualist. To understand the new ideology, a historical sociological perspective is taken to examine the nationalist period of anti-colonial struggle, the state developmentalist period of Soeharto’s New Order, and the neoliberal period since 1998. Two interrelated arguments are made. First, the ideology of development in Indonesia has changed from earlier nationalist understandings of Pancasila to a cosmopolitan neoliberal ideology based in a nostalgic nationalism. Second, a modernist Islamic perspective on secularism and Islam both supports and is supported by this ideological shift. These arguments are illuminated through two examples of the advance of cosmopolitan neoliberal ideology: optimism and education. Optimism is focused on individual integrity to redress Indonesia’s problems with corruption. Education is offered by optimists as the escalator to development. Empirically, the Indonesia Mengajar programme of sending young university graduates to teach elementary school in remote parts of the country is examined for its neo-modernisationist assumptions. The article concludes that this dominant ideology abandons earlier solidaristic forms of nationalism and holds little hope for addressing the vast structural inequalities in Indonesia.
File is AM (accepted manuscript) version.
For VOR (version of record) follow DOI link or request from me.
Introduction essay on ecologically unequal exchange in comparative perspective. Part of a special issue edited by R. Scott Frey, Paul K. Gellert, and Harry F. Dahms on unequal ecological exchange examines inequities between cores and peripheries in the global distribution of environmental goods and bads. These essays will help advance our thinking about environmental conflicts, and they include papers analyzing international trade in chocolate, palm oil, and coffee in addition to other contributions advancing theory about patterns of environmental inequalities in the world economic and political system. In addition, research articles explore the “renewable energy paradox” and the struggles over indigenous land in Bolivia.
We are happy to announce the publication of the Summer/Fall 2017 issue of the Journal of World-Systems Research (http://jwsr.pitt.edu).
As the world faces deepening crises related to inequality, environmental degradation, and political polarization, this issue of the Journal of World-Systems Research offers analyses that can help readers better understand the long-term causes of today’s crises as we consider possible alternative policies that can enhance people’s well-being.
Environmental Conflict
A special issue edited by R. Scott Frey, Paul K. Gellert, and Harry F. Dahms on unequal ecological exchange examines inequities between cores and peripheries in the global distribution of environmental goods and bads. These essays will help advance our thinking about environmental conflicts, and they include papers analyzing international trade in chocolate, palm oil, and coffee in addition to other contributions advancing theory about patterns of environmental inequalities in the world economic and political system. In addition, research articles explore the “renewable energy paradox” and the struggles over indigenous land in Bolivia.
of Power: Struggles over Forest Law, Permits, and
Rights in Indonesia
PAUL K. GELLERT AND ANDIKO
Amid the rapid expansion of oil palm plantations, the Indonesian Ministry of Forestry
finds its authority over the forested areas (kawasan hutan) under pressure and continues
to pursue strategies to legally maintain the areas within its jurisdiction. Combining insights
from legal studies with political economy, this article applies the concept of “political
forests” to contemporary contestations and the development of “rule of law” in
relation to Indonesia’s forested areas. Establishing legal certainty and “rule of law” are
widely asserted to be important but never fully achieved. Two cases demonstrate this:
the first focuses on the negotiated resolution of overlapping permits in the kawasan
hutan between the center and the region in Central Kalimantan Province. The second
examines the maneuvers of the Ministry of Forestry to (re)assert its authority over
kawasan hutan by classifying palm oil as a tree crop. The article concludes that the widespread
quest for certainty and rule of law is quixotic because it ignores the realities of political
economy, including social conflict, beneath the veneer of law.
Based on ethnographic field research conducted in Jakarta, this article argues that there is a new ideology of development in Indonesia that is cosmopolitan, nostalgic and individualist. To understand the new ideology, a historical sociological perspective is taken to examine the nationalist period of anti-colonial struggle, the state developmentalist period of Soeharto’s New Order, and the neoliberal period since 1998. Two interrelated arguments are made. First, the ideology of development in Indonesia has changed from earlier nationalist understandings of Pancasila to a cosmopolitan neoliberal ideology based in a nostalgic nationalism. Second, a modernist Islamic perspective on secularism and Islam both supports and is supported by this ideological shift. These arguments are illuminated through two examples of the advance of cosmopolitan neoliberal ideology: optimism and education. Optimism is focused on individual integrity to redress Indonesia’s problems with corruption. Education is offered by optimists as the escalator to development. Empirically, the Indonesia Mengajar programme of sending young university graduates to teach elementary school in remote parts of the country is examined for its neo-modernisationist assumptions. The article concludes that this dominant ideology abandons earlier solidaristic forms of nationalism and holds little hope for addressing the vast structural inequalities in Indonesia.
File is AM (accepted manuscript) version.
For VOR (version of record) follow DOI link or request from me.