14 research outputs found
Globalization as the âPulpingâ of Landscapes: Forestry Capitalismâs North-South Territorial Accumulation
The article presents the findings of a long-term incorporated comparison of forestry capitalism's globalization process. Primary data was collected by participant observation in pulp investment areas in Brazil between 2004 and 2011 and semi-structured interviews with key industry personnel, particularly in Finland. It is argued that the key cyclic change in industrial forestry from innovationâcapitalization to materialâterritorial accumulation explains why and how the industry has globalized to the south via industrial tree plantations. The interlinked northern (Finnish) and southern (Brazilian) cases reveal that industry trajectories are influenced by who controls the supply chains of commodities. The findings are relevant for theorizing about the globalization of natural resource exploitation sectors. Changes in agrarian political economies and agency of state, business, and social movement actorsâthat is, socio-ecological relations and landscapesâhelp to explain how and why national and global capitalism and its developmentalâenvironmental impacts are transformed.Peer reviewe