Intensifying Political Geographies of Authoritarianism: Toward an Anti-geopolitics of Garment Worker Struggles in Neoliberal Cambodia
Sabina Lawreniuk
Annals of the American Association of Geographers, 2020, vol. 110, issue 4, 1174-1191
Abstract:
Cambodia’s recent crackdown on freedoms of expression, association, and assembly coincides with the wider geopolitical ascent of illiberal democracy. Scholarly and public discourse suggests that we are now witnessing a global authoritarian turn, possibly linked to the current conditions of late neoliberal capitalist development where deprivations linked to state rollback have engendered a corrective state rollout. The language of the global authoritarian turn, however, echoes earlier unhelpful and totalizing readings of neoliberal expansion as a process of top-down diffusion. To counter this, this article argues for a recentering of local geographies in understanding authoritarian neoliberalism and a renewed focus on the bottom-up dynamics of its articulation in specific contexts. Drawing from a detailed study of garment worker activism, this article unravels the two-way relationship that unfolds between the intensified experiences of capital and resistance in Cambodia and the intensifying political geography of authoritarianism that reverberates as a result. Forwarding an antigeopolitical reading of authoritarian neoliberalism in Cambodia, the article recasts the current crisis underway in Cambodia, disrupting the notion of an authoritarian turn. Rather than the top-down imposition of a new model of autocratic government, the crackdown is shown to represent an intensification of existing authoritarian neoliberalism provoked by geopolitics from below. Here, intensification reflects a demographic and spatial shift in the concentration of authoritarian strategies toward Cambodia’s garment workers. Key Words: anti-geopolitics, authoritarianism, Cambodia, neoliberalism, resistance.
Date: 2020
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:taf:raagxx:v:110:y:2020:i:4:p:1174-1191
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DOI: 10.1080/24694452.2019.1670040
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