TY - JOUR
T1 - Hybrid cultures of postdevelopment
T2 - The struggle for popular hegemony in rural Nicaragua
AU - Cupples, Julie
AU - Glynn, Kevin
AU - Larios, Irving
N1 - Funding Information:
The field work for this research was funded in part by a University of Canterbury research grant (U6540). The authors wish to thank the people of Northern León for including us in their political struggles and the Annals editor and three reviewers for their helpful and constructive comments, as well as Marney Brosnan for cartography.
PY - 2007/12
Y1 - 2007/12
N2 - This article contributes to contemporary debates around "postdevelopment" by examining the new social alliances that are reimagining, rearticulating, and refashioning development discourses and practices in Northern León, an impoverished region on Nicaragua's Pacific coastal strip. We examine the strategies and tactics whereby Northern León's citizens, local leaders, and nongovernmental organizations have reworked the region's cultural, political, and economic terrains in ways that negotiate and contest Northern León's marginalization by the Nicaraguan central government, and that challenge and reshape global spaces and imaginaries constituted through the disciplinary and regulatory discourses of international financial institutions and predatory multinational capital. We draw particularly on Gramscian perspectives and other contemporary theoretical engagements with neoliberalism, globalization, and postdevelopment in order to present the case of Northern León as an opportunity to think through the possibilities for forms of grassroots globalism that mobilize strategies of discursive activism, disarticulation/rearticulation, and "place-projection" in ways that destabilize and disrupt the linear temporalities and spatial fixities of mainstream development thought and practice.
AB - This article contributes to contemporary debates around "postdevelopment" by examining the new social alliances that are reimagining, rearticulating, and refashioning development discourses and practices in Northern León, an impoverished region on Nicaragua's Pacific coastal strip. We examine the strategies and tactics whereby Northern León's citizens, local leaders, and nongovernmental organizations have reworked the region's cultural, political, and economic terrains in ways that negotiate and contest Northern León's marginalization by the Nicaraguan central government, and that challenge and reshape global spaces and imaginaries constituted through the disciplinary and regulatory discourses of international financial institutions and predatory multinational capital. We draw particularly on Gramscian perspectives and other contemporary theoretical engagements with neoliberalism, globalization, and postdevelopment in order to present the case of Northern León as an opportunity to think through the possibilities for forms of grassroots globalism that mobilize strategies of discursive activism, disarticulation/rearticulation, and "place-projection" in ways that destabilize and disrupt the linear temporalities and spatial fixities of mainstream development thought and practice.
KW - Globalization
KW - Gramsci
KW - Neoliberalism
KW - Nicaragua
KW - Postdevelopment
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=36348936100&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/j.1467-8306.2007.00583.x
DO - 10.1111/j.1467-8306.2007.00583.x
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:36348936100
SN - 0004-5608
VL - 97
SP - 786
EP - 801
JO - Annals of the Association of American Geographers
JF - Annals of the Association of American Geographers
IS - 4
ER -