Greening : the revolution revisited : farmers, NGOs and the Cuban state

In this thesis I revisit the acclaimed transformation towards organic agriculture in Cuba. Using Lefebvre's trialectics of space, I explore how dominant representations of Organic' agricultural space in Cuba, the so-called 'Greening of the Revolution’, was created through government i...

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Main Author: Blaufuss, Kathrin
Published: Durham University 2006
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Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.535798
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5357982015-10-03T03:19:57ZGreening : the revolution revisited : farmers, NGOs and the Cuban stateBlaufuss, Kathrin2006In this thesis I revisit the acclaimed transformation towards organic agriculture in Cuba. Using Lefebvre's trialectics of space, I explore how dominant representations of Organic' agricultural space in Cuba, the so-called 'Greening of the Revolution’, was created through government institutions and public policy. I further investigate the locally lived gendered realities of farmers in a selected cooperative. I argue that the prevailing imaginary of a state-led nationwide transformation needs to be deconstructed and the role of NGOs, in particular Northern NGOs, to be fully acknowledged in the creation of 'organic' agriculture in Cuba. Northern NGOs were attracted by the romanticist environmental imagery of Cuba’s green agriculture. เท securing funding from donors, they have framed agr๐-ecology in Cuba according to their own understandings as well as needs of 'logframes', budget codes and project cycles. Northern NGOs are acting as transmission belts for Western understandings of NGO characteristics and agency. This has resulted in a re-shaping and positioning of Cuban NGO identity, creating new dependencies and tensions in the process and introducing fashionable themes, such as gender. 'Gender mainstreaming' is an outsider-driven process, as donors and Northern NGOs have requested the integration of gender into projects. Their practices neither go beyond the 'incorporation of women in the workforce', nor engage sufficiently with the gendered realities of the everyday, as I show in my case-study in a cooperative. Farmers are performing, negotiating or at times resisting the dominant 'representations of space' - i.e. the state, regulations and policies, but also - increasingly - NGO discourses and agendas/frameworks. This thesis employs empirical data collected during 10-months of research in Cuba.631.5Durham Universityhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.535798http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/2737/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 631.5
spellingShingle 631.5
Blaufuss, Kathrin
Greening : the revolution revisited : farmers, NGOs and the Cuban state
description In this thesis I revisit the acclaimed transformation towards organic agriculture in Cuba. Using Lefebvre's trialectics of space, I explore how dominant representations of Organic' agricultural space in Cuba, the so-called 'Greening of the Revolution’, was created through government institutions and public policy. I further investigate the locally lived gendered realities of farmers in a selected cooperative. I argue that the prevailing imaginary of a state-led nationwide transformation needs to be deconstructed and the role of NGOs, in particular Northern NGOs, to be fully acknowledged in the creation of 'organic' agriculture in Cuba. Northern NGOs were attracted by the romanticist environmental imagery of Cuba’s green agriculture. เท securing funding from donors, they have framed agr๐-ecology in Cuba according to their own understandings as well as needs of 'logframes', budget codes and project cycles. Northern NGOs are acting as transmission belts for Western understandings of NGO characteristics and agency. This has resulted in a re-shaping and positioning of Cuban NGO identity, creating new dependencies and tensions in the process and introducing fashionable themes, such as gender. 'Gender mainstreaming' is an outsider-driven process, as donors and Northern NGOs have requested the integration of gender into projects. Their practices neither go beyond the 'incorporation of women in the workforce', nor engage sufficiently with the gendered realities of the everyday, as I show in my case-study in a cooperative. Farmers are performing, negotiating or at times resisting the dominant 'representations of space' - i.e. the state, regulations and policies, but also - increasingly - NGO discourses and agendas/frameworks. This thesis employs empirical data collected during 10-months of research in Cuba.
author Blaufuss, Kathrin
author_facet Blaufuss, Kathrin
author_sort Blaufuss, Kathrin
title Greening : the revolution revisited : farmers, NGOs and the Cuban state
title_short Greening : the revolution revisited : farmers, NGOs and the Cuban state
title_full Greening : the revolution revisited : farmers, NGOs and the Cuban state
title_fullStr Greening : the revolution revisited : farmers, NGOs and the Cuban state
title_full_unstemmed Greening : the revolution revisited : farmers, NGOs and the Cuban state
title_sort greening : the revolution revisited : farmers, ngos and the cuban state
publisher Durham University
publishDate 2006
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.535798
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