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Indigenous food sovereignty in a captured state: the Garifuna in Honduras

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  • Timothy MacNeill

Abstract

This study explores the emergence of the Afro-Indigenous food sovereignty movement in the context of a captured Honduran state and unequal political economy. In contrast with national-level research that has advocated a policy of food security in the context of non-indigenous campesino movements, this work explains how food sovereignty is more appropriate regarding Garifuna Hondurans. In a political economy that has precluded other options, and given the deep cultural relation that Garifuna activists have to land and autonomy, food sovereignty provides a possibility around which Indigenous development can be animated. It encapsulates a local ‘fight’ response to repression as an alternative to northern ‘flight’, often via migrant caravans, that many Garifuna have undertaken. This study shows how food sovereignty, more than being a technical policy set, is a discursive and material node through which dispossessed and especially indigenous populations can enhance decolonial power in the contestation of entrenched hegemonic and institutionalised power in a corrupt, unequal and colonised political economy.

Suggested Citation

  • Timothy MacNeill, 2020. "Indigenous food sovereignty in a captured state: the Garifuna in Honduras," Third World Quarterly, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 41(9), pages 1537-1555, September.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:ctwqxx:v:41:y:2020:i:9:p:1537-1555
    DOI: 10.1080/01436597.2020.1768840
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