Environmentality: a militarized mentality... a pattern of thought that seeks to justify increases in national and civilian security by increasing insecurity; environmentalism turned into a policing action—Robert P. Marzec
According to Robert Marzec, of the University of Minnesota,
science has sought since the 1700s to emancipate human beings from their
dependence on chance; the science and philosophy of men ultimately “brought
about a form of securitization that changed the understanding of Nature from an
entity on which one depended into an entity that posed a threat.”
The “natural world” became a primal chaos of danger and
uncertainty from which civilized humanity must free itself. According to the
philosophical and scientific men of the Enlightenment—Locke, Smith,
Hobbes, Bacon, Descartes, and others—the environment had to be
subdued—securitized—for humans to obtain their independence...humans had to
emancipate themselves from their (unenclosed) environments. Environment (like
womankind) became “the other”, whose vagaries needed to be subdued and
cultivated.
Fast forward to December 1968 when Garrett Hardin published his
paper in Science entitled “The Tragedy of the Commons”. Neoliberal capitalists,
right wing theorists, and new-colonial development agencies, embraced the term
to justify their privatization model based on productivity and growth. This
iconic paper “framed the debate about common property for the last 30 years,
and has exerted a baleful influence upon international development and
environmental policy, even after Hardin himself admitted that he had got it
wrong, and rephrased his entire theory,” writes the Land Magazine.
The Commons & The Myth of Tragedy
Hardin initially argued that “the commons were a less-advanced
form of social existence, one that existed without rules or regulations,”
writes Robert Marzec in his book Militarizing the Environment. Hardin
supposed that “humans were fundamentally self-interested and at war with one
another, [and] this unregulated social space of existence would result in over
exploitation and ultimate destruction of natural resources.”
Hardin vigorously applied this singular perspective to all kinds
of “property” from fish populations to national parks and polluted steams to
parking lots and he prescribed a singular solution: assigning private property
or enclosure.
Alan Bates in "Far from the Madding Crowd" |
“The shortcoming of the tragic myth of the commons,” writes The Land
Magazine, “is its strangely unidimensional picture of human nature. The
farmers in Hardin’s pasture do not seem to talk to one another. As individuals,
they are alienated, rational, utilitarian-maximizing automatons and little
else, the sum total of their social life is the grim Hobbesian struggle of each
against all, and all together against the pasture in which they are trapped.”
Nothing could be further from the truth. In fact, it is the
opposite.
Hardin’s single-minded argument erroneously imposed the behaviour
of a post-commons humanity—entrepreneurs trained in a capitalist enclosure
model—on inhabitants who operated by other social paradigms in the commons.
What Hardin overlooked, said E.P. Thompson, “is that commoners were not without
common sense.” Hardin later retracted his use of this designation on commons humanity.
Inhabitancy vs. Entrepreneurship
The commons had developed a highly regulated social system of
checks and balances against monopolization. Villages used functional mechanisms
of seasonal distribution and redistribution, such as the “mead stick” system,
to ensure that no single person would gain monopoly of the land. Each mead
stick associated with a particular farmer was placed into a sac and drawn to
determine which “mead-ow” a farmer got. Only the land considered suitable for
crops was cultivated; the remainder was open for all to use for cattle. Individuals who had access to the land were
not entrepreneurs, bent on accumulating capital; they were inhabitants of the
land and used it for sustenance rather than investment. The focus was on
subsistence, not growth and production. The enclosure mentality, and its
partner environmentality, arose like a warring specter over the human
virtues of cooperation, compassion, fairness, and kindness.
When did we change? When—and why—did we get greedy for power?
The Tragedy of The Enclosures
According to Marzec, enclosures began “before the development of
capitalism during the transformation from the Saxon system of tenure to the
more militarized manorial system.” Enclosures really took hold in the feudal
times, as tenure faded in favour of “manorial lords who desired the legal right
to enclose for the purpose of increasing their wealth and, by extension, the
ability to direct resources toward their defensive capacity.”
Marzec defines the enclosure movement by three actions: the
eradication of inhabitancy, development of common law and a mandate to “improve
land”.
History demonstrates that it is “enclosures—the dominant paradigm
of modernity—that contribute to the exploitation of resources and the
over-population of the planet,” writes Marzec. “The very idea of a cash crop—an
environmental ‘improvement’ that compromises biodiversity in favour of
anthropological gain— depends on the logic of enclosure.” Within the enclosure
paradigm the entrepreneur is the essential human half of a machine that
transforms a valueless chaotic ecosystem into a “surplus” of power and
production. When did we lose our connection to Nature? When did it become just
resource to be cultivated and improved?
European Enlightenment thinkers and political theorists of the
1600s and 1700s created the architecture of neoliberalism. Writing during the
time of enclosing transformations, they all developed notions of human nature
as warring, selfish and only interested in personal gain that organized its struggle
and freedom around the cultivation/subjugation of the earth.
By the late 1700s, landscape began to be perceived through its
utility. Even beauty was perceived according to whether a landscape was
cultivated and ordered or wild and chaotic. Louis the Fourteenth’s Versailles
gardens was totally based on the premise of order and the suppression of
Nature’s chaos to the will of ‘man’. “Enclosed spaces were characterized as
remarkable, beautiful, and pleasant, full of grace and gaiety. Open areas were
labelled as promiscuous, and inhabitants of open areas as wild, and in as rough
a state as the country they dwell in. Ecosystems came to be identified as
useful or bare,” writes Marzec. I recently ran across this viewpoint in a 2016
article by Huffington Post in which Canada was described as mostly “empty”—as
in empty of enclosed communities of people. The fact that these areas are rich
with boreal forest, all kinds of life and many commons communities of
indigenous people was totally disregarded by using the term “empty”.
The Age of Enclosure
According to Marzec, the true age of enclosure is the
twenty-first century. He describes as example the long history of destructive
development and environmental degradation in northern Brazil, where over four
hundred years of colonial rule and development have naturally evolved into the
neocolonial age of environmentality. Northern Brazil is the location of
Camacari (owned by Brasken), the Western hemisphere’s largest petrochemical
complex, with fifty thousand employees who work with chemicals, “such as
benzene and alcohols, that affect the Amazon’s central and peripheral nervous
system. Workers operate with little awareness of these chemicals’ toxicity,”
writes Marzec. Camacari provides chemicals to Dow and Innova and in 2010 they
acquired Sunoco.
Enclosing the Amazon
The Amazon River carries more than a fifth of all the freshwater
that flows into the sea of the entire planet. This is five times more than it’s
nearest competitor, the Congo, and twenty times more than the Mississippi
River. Outside of the glaciated polar regions, half to two-thirds of the fresh
water on the Earth is present in the Amazon, Marzec tells us. “This vast amount
of water is increasingly polluted with arsenic, mercury and other highly toxic
substances from mining and smelting,” writes Marzec. Only forty years ago,
Amazon water was drinkable; now, with mining, industry and sewage from its
millions of inhabitants, Amazon waters must be purified through some means.
Sadly, those in power have embraced Hardin’s tragic commons
theory to steer towards enclosure as a means to save the forests (and the
water). Researchers have estimated that within five years, an area the size of
Virginia will have been handed over to private corporations and entrepreneurs
to manage at their discretion. Along with those developers, the United States
increasingly strengthens its military presence in Brazil, ensuring access by
its corporations to Brazil’s energy reserves and putting pressure on ecosystems
and associated indigenous populations that inhabit those territories.
Invariably, writes Marzec, “indigenous territories are subsumed into programs
of energy exploitation.”
We know where this will lead. And that is the real tragedy.
Nina Munteanu is an ecologist and internationally published author of award-nominated speculative novels, short stories and non-fiction. She is co-editor of Europa SF and currently teaches writing courses at George Brown College and the University of Toronto. Visit www.ninamunteanu.ca for the latest on her books. Nina’s recent book is the bilingual “La natura dell’acqua / The Way of Water” (Mincione Edizioni, Rome). Her latest “Water Is…” is currently an Amazon Bestseller and NY Times ‘year in reading’ choice of Margaret Atwood.
Nina Munteanu is an ecologist and internationally published author of award-nominated speculative novels, short stories and non-fiction. She is co-editor of Europa SF and currently teaches writing courses at George Brown College and the University of Toronto. Visit www.ninamunteanu.ca for the latest on her books. Nina’s recent book is the bilingual “La natura dell’acqua / The Way of Water” (Mincione Edizioni, Rome). Her latest “Water Is…” is currently an Amazon Bestseller and NY Times ‘year in reading’ choice of Margaret Atwood.