Disorderly Development Texto
Disorderly Development Texto
of the University of Guelph, Ontario, Canada Since Namibia became independent from South Africa in 1 !, the diverse ethnolinguistic groups "no#n as the San have progressively become an organi$ed political community and participate in international indigenous peoples rights forums% &nforming leadership around a pan'San identity, they are currently engaged in global activism and local struggles for rights as indigenous people% &ndependence and globali$ation bring #ith them liberali$ed trade mar"ets, flo#s of capital, the tourism industry and an array of NGO activity concerned #ith development pro(ects into Namibia, affecting local economies and social relations% )his results in opportunities of empo#erment *through recognition and redistribution+ but also in ne# sets of problems% )here are contradictions inherent to local identity politics and global activism in an enduring social situation of corruption, political disorder, racial segregation and class e,ploitation% )he San are visible in the media and international forums, but as their identity becomes globali$ed, the San are encouraged to self'promote a stereotypical image as isolated, pristine primitives, not unli"e the colonial representations of the -ushmen, and #hich may reproduce the same ine.ualities that have long affected them% /eified notions of culture are embedded in definitions of globali$ation% 01ocal cultures2 resist a 0#orld culture2 of global homogeni$ation by raising and fi,ing ethnic boundaries% )he intensification of local, primordiali$ed ethnic heterogeneity is assumed to be the normal response to universal, homogeni$ing tendencies% Dra#ing from Stuart 3all4s claim that globali$ation entails a homogeni$ing form of representation, Sylvain suggests that it is about a particular #ay of representing culture% &t is not, or not only, a 05estern culture2 that is being globali$ed, but also a 5estern idea of 0culture2% 0Cultures2 are seen as bounded, ahistorical 0facts of nature2% &ntensified ethnic and cultural assertions under globali$ation amount to the globali$ation of a particularly essentiali$ed idea of culture% /eassertion is less a reaction against globali$ation than an e,pression or even a product of globali$ation%
)he proliferation of grassroots activism by NGOs and identity politics advocates, such as the international indigenous peoples4 movement, results in the 0globali$ation'from'belo#2 of a 0sedentarist metaphysics2% &ndigeneity is a primordial, organic, ahistorical identity of a people as the first inhabitants #ith an enclosed landscape% &ndigenous advocates developed this from the institutional frame#or" of state nationalism% &dentity is lin"ed to the land% )erritorial metaphors ground a discrete, bounded, self'contained identity, naturali$ing and essentiali$ing it% &ndigenous identity grounds the claims for land after its dispossession by other incoming populations or colonial po#ers, but also forces many groups 6self'7 identified as indigenous to the 6self'7 imposition of e,ternali$ing an appearance of authenticity and even primitiveness, in order to gain recognition% )his leads to the parado,ical fact that rights'based indigenous activism contributes to the instrumentali$ation and the ensuing essentiali$ation of culture as a fact of nature% &t re'legitimi$es the 0separate development2 policies of Apartheid% Sylvain argues that the e,pressions of San identity as primordial reflect the globali$ation of the essentialist idea of culture #hich creates a particular environment for development in the 8alahari, influencing the San struggles for rights, recognition and resources% )he primordial, 0introverted2 idea of culture is instrumentali$ed in local conte,ts of disorder and corruption associated #ith administrative vacuums after independence, the proliferation of uncoordinated NGO activity and the imperative for authenticity of ethno'mar"eting ventures, largely bypassing any social and economic benefits for the San% A landscape of ine.uality, e,ploitation and dispossession shapes the 0place of recognition2 in #hich the San have to struggle for identity and social (ustice 60redistribution2, as in Nancy 9raser7% Sylvain argues that her case study in the Omahe"e region of Namibia among 0hybrid2 farm San sho#s ho# racial and ethnic stereotypes shape local systems of class e,ploitation but also ho# class shapes the cultural life of the San% )heir situation stems from a conflictive relation #ith the struggling 05hites2 and 0-lac"s2: the descendants of displaced or tre""ing German and Afri"aner leftover after coloni$ation and #ar, -antu'spea"ers as the 3erero and the )s#anas, and other 8hoisan groups as the Nama'Damaras% )hey act as e,ploitative employers and even as abusive masters still% )he San ta"e care of farms and cattle in e,change of unfair remuneration% Despite being
in the minority, other dispersed and mobile San communities are able to engage in hunting and gathering% )hey attract the favour of the international community #ith their more seemingly primordial -ushman #ay of life% ;thnicity can be displayed and recogni$ed opportunistically in the 8alahari #hen employment or supporting "in net#or"s are available, but primordialism is fossili$ing this fle,ibility% )he Omahe"e San )rust 6OS)7 NGO has been established to further educational programmes, build 0traditional2 leadership and development pro(ects #ith a heavy emphasis in cultural aspects% )#o representatives of each one of the <= San communities recogni$ed in Omahe"e are entitled to membership% -ut <> of these communities consist of a minority of scattered San #ho seasonally live off the farms, #hile t#o thirds of the San population are allocated to only 1 community of farm'#or"ers and domestic servants% )he most e,ploited ma(ority 0hybrid2 community has a lesser say% ?olitical disorder and cultural primordialism combine to sustain systems of ine.uality for an underclass of Omahe"e San, sho#ing a convergence bet#een ethno'development and the commodification of culture in the tourism industry% ;ssentiali$ation and instrumentali$ation mas" the class'shaped culture of the San and continue their marginali$ation and e,ploitation, even if San cultural and ethnic pride is re'asserted and they do too discover its added value as a social and economic asset% -esides e,cluding from political representation the 0hybrid2 groups #ith a lesser resemblance to the ideali$ed pristine image of the -ushmen, the #idely embraced stress on essentiali$ed ideas of culture mas"s the intersectionality of systems of gender, racial, ethnic and class ine.ualities% Cultural identity is politici$ed, but class is depolitici$ed, naturali$ing the dispossessed social situation of the San% &n the face of social and class ine.ualities that are (ustified by ideologies of hierarchy, the globali$ed concept of a fossili$ed cultural identity and the e,pected San identification #ith it, conspire #ith local ethno'development and ethno'tourism pro(ects in perpetuating the underclass status% Culture has become an instrument in the struggles for resources% &ndigenous identity is grounded in a uni.ue relationship to the land% Discrete and bounded communities attract donors and ethno'development pro(ects% )here are strong e,pectations of agencies and tourists to be satisfied #ith displays of primitive authenticity% )ourism is a booming industry in Namibia, promoted by supranational organi$ations li"e the &nternational @onetary 9und% )ransnational Governmentality means in the 8alahari also a chaotically implemented succession of uncoordinated developmental pro(ects carried by NGOs% )hey
eventually fail or are forgotten, based in the proclaimed and perceived cultural needs and talents of the primordial San% Capital indeed flo#s in #hen the San present themselves as the -ushmen so lin"ed to nature% -ut this "ind of 6mis7recognition becomes even more problematic #hen it is not the San #ho act as their o#n cultural bro"ers or actual beneficiaries% -et#een them and the development initiatives, stands the corruption of others acting as ethnic entrepreneurs, capitali$ing from San labour% San #or" in farms, or as cultural performers of traditional dances, 0ecological' friendly2 animal trac"ing and hunts, and e,hibitions of semi'nudity for the demand of commoditi$ed e,oticism from tourists% )he fruit of their labour is still e,propriated by the descendants of German and Afri"aner settlers, 3erero farmers and cattle'o#ners, and even the Nama'Damaras 68hoi, 3ottentots7 so closely related to the San, but #ho en(oy a better position in the ethnic'class system% Contrary to the e,pectations of the tourist and the donors, San have a class consciousness% )hey recogni$e infrastructural needs as food, #ater, health programmes and employment% )hey are able to see the performance of identity as income'opportunity and not 6only7 as cultural reassertion% &n conclusion, the interface bet#een culture and class must al#ays be ta"en as problematic% &s ethnic reassertion dooming or dignifying for the SanA 5ill recognition eventually lead to better redistributionA )he San themselves have the burden of deciding it% &n a fe# years since the late 1 !s, Sylvain has noticed a similar shift to that that )erence )urner observed among the 8ayapB of the southern Ama$on basin bet#een the 1 =!s and the 1 C!s% &n her first visits to the 8alahari in 1 =, the San #ere eager to pose for photographs in their best clothes holding their most valued commodities as e,pression of their personal pride% -ut as a result of the global shifts, the local dynamics and the advocacy of NGOs, Sylvain no# finds them ready to shed their contemporary clothes, and eager to pose in animal s"ins and bead#or" as a genuine e,pression of #hat they value%