The gender entrapment of neoliberal development.
Woods, Tryon P.
Introduction: The new folk devils
[1] In Policing the Crisis: Mugging, the State, and Law and Order,
their classic application of cultural studies, political economy, and
critical race studies to the interrogation of "crime," Stuart
Hall and his co-authors from the Centre for Contemporary Cultural
Studies at the University of Birmingham analyzed the rise of
law-and-order politics in Britain in the 1970s (Hall et al. 1978). They
showed how the confluence of events, media coverage, and official
responses conjoined with the historical formation of Britain's
racialized society and its nascent economic restructuring to create a
moral panic around mugging. Hall et al. demonstrated how the
"mugger" was constructed in expressly anti-black terms as a
new external menace to British society; he described the mugger as a
"new folk devil" animating the society's racialized
frenzy for police protection and a punitive state apparatus. Policing
the Crisis remains a benchmark for critical studies of
"crime," criminalization, and punishment for a number of
reasons: among these is Hall's rigorous case for shifting the focus
from the "deviant act" of mugging to the official and public
responses it inspired, created it, and came to "own"
it--suggesting that "it is this whole complex--action and
reaction--as well as what produced it and what its consequences were,
which requires to be explained" (Hall et al. 1978: 18-19). In
different terms, then, the standard put forth by Hall and his colleagues
redefines the very field of study called criminology as a relationship,
or set of relations, in which the object of study is bound up in the
terms of study and in the relations of production (culturally as well as
economically) in which the object appears in a given historical moment.
This analytic framework allowed Policing the Crisis to presciently
anticipate the law and order themes of Margaret Thatcher's
Conservative government in the 1980s, as well as Ronald Reagan's
tenure in the U.S.
[2] Although Policing the Crisis itself remains obscured in
contemporary critical studies of criminalization and the social
construction of harm, the analytical framework proposed by Hall et al.
has largely come to define the emergent interdisciplinary field in the
past few decades. When Mike Davis, who is frequently credited with
coining the phrase "a prison-industrial complex" in a 1995
article in The Nation magazine, sought to explain the radical
transformation of the California rural landscape from agriculture to
incarceration ("Hell Factories in the Field"), he exercised
Hall's basic framework. As one of the leading scholar-activists on
this issue, Ruth Wilson Gilmore, explains, "What I find useful in
terms of thinking of the Prison Industrial Complex, is that like the
Military Industrial Complex, there are all sorts of people and places
that are tied in, or want to be tied in, to that complex" (Paglen
n.d.). By centering analysis on the set of relations that converge on
the political economic, spatial, and cultural site of the prison,
"prison industrial complex" is now recognized by many scholars
and activists as a more accurate term than "criminal justice
system," precisely because it does what Hall and his co-authors
proposed in 1978, to move away from a focus on deviant or dangerous
acts, and criminal justice policy as an instrumental response to such
behaviors, and instead to focus on the complex set of relations
"tied in," in Gilmore's words, to "crime."
[3] The trend in critical scholarship on
criminality/criminalization/criminal justice has thus been largely
concerned with these relations, including the identification of the
particular experiences and positionalities of women within this complex.
Women themselves (including gay, bisexual, and transgendered) have been
leading intellectuals and advocates for prison abolition, demonstrating
(once again) the imperative of an intersectional analysis of white
supremacy, patriarchy, heterosexism and homophobia, capitalism, and
empire (cf. Bukhari 2010; Davis 1971, 2003; Gilmore 2007; James 2000,
2007; Shakur 1987). For instance, such work identified early on that
criminalization is an intrinsically racialized process; that women of
color constitute the fastest growing prison population; that the
explosion of imprisonment expands both public and private forms of
punishment for women; and that state violence is a dire matter of
interpersonal intimacy (cf. Davis 1998; Incite! 2006; King 2010; Maurer
and Chesney-Lind 2003; Mogul et al. 2011; Smith 2005).
[4] There has also been an important, although still relatively
under-developed, body of work that situates these processes globally.
This scholarship takes a global approach to the study of the prison
industrial complex in two ways: it looks at how the prison industrial
complex as it has developed in the U.S. has its repetitive and
proliferating impacts and parallels around the world; and it examines
the historical production of global processes (e.g., neoliberal
globalization, immigration, re-colonization) as commensurate with the
emergence of a global prison industrial complex. Julia Sudbury's
2005 edited volume Global Lockdown: Race, Gender, and the
Prison-Industrial Complex has led the way in applying a transnational
feminist framework to the study of criminalization and imprisonment.
Sudbury argues that the dramatic increase in the women's prison
population in Britain (as well as in other Western European countries)
is attributable to a combination of four factors: the racialized
feminization of poverty under neoliberal globalization, the racialized
"tough on crime" agenda of successive Conservative and New
Labor governments, the transnational war on drugs, and the transatlantic
spread and consolidation of the prison-industrial complex in Europe
(Sudbury 2005: 168.)
[5] In this essay, I pursue the pathways blazed by the feminists of
color cited above (and others) to chart the conditions of possibility
for the criminalization of Nigerian women who migrate to Western Europe.
I argue that the emergence of post-colonial Nigeria, through Western
neoliberal development economics, has produced a scene of banal
structural violence that couples dispossession with criminalization: the
developmental process imposed in Nigeria by neoliberal economic planners
dispossesses Nigerians of the means of their prior livelihoods and
survival practices. This process of political economic
"development" is eroticized and grounded in gendered violence
in such a way that for Nigerian women the changes imposed under
neoliberal globalization amount to a set-up for criminalization. To
highlight this situation, and to layer a critique of the law into my
analysis of criminalization, I argue that Nigerian women experience
neoliberal development as "gender entrapment." In criminal
law, "entrapment" occurs when a law enforcement agent induces
a person to commit an offense that the person would otherwise have been
unlikely to commit. Beth Richie translated the legal category
"entrapment" into the theoretical concept "gender
entrapment" in order to analyze how poor black women in the U.S.
come to be incarcerated at the intersections of race, gender, and
violence, punished for a web of social conditions over which they have
no control. These women are "compelled to crime," and
subsequently, imprisoned by the same conditions that inform their
subjection to violence within their personal relationships (Richie
1996). Richie's analysis demonstrates how women come to participate
in illegal activities (e.g., check fraud, distributing or using illicit
drugs, stealing, and commercial sex) either as a direct result of the
violence in their intimate lives, or because of the threat of it (Davis
1998). The political economy of neoliberal globalization presents
similar conditions of compulsion for black women in Nigeria. If we
conceptualize violence as a historically produced social experience,
then Nigerian women are punished in Western prisons by the same global
processes that guided the violent upheaval of their traditional way of
life and compelled their migration into Western circuits of criminality.
[6] In the tradition of Policing the Crisis, I am less concerned
neither with describing or documenting "deviant acts," nor
with an empirical study of crime rates, incidence of arrest, or
disparate treatments of these migrant women by systems of criminal
justice across national contexts. Rather, I focus on the historical
relations that produce the criminalized Nigerian woman as a "new
folk devil" in order to call into question the paradigm of
"development" and its sexual-erotic politics of
"civilization," the gender entrapment of neoliberal
globalization.
Dispossessed by neoliberal "development"
[7] Nigerian women criminalized in Western Europe are typically
involved in the commercial sex industry or international drug
trafficking. In one weekend in March 2003, eighty-four "suspected
prostitutes" were deported to Nigeria from Italy, joining the
several thousands of other Nigerian women who have been deported from
European countries such as Italy, Germany, Britain, and Belgium since
the late 1990s (Kempadoo 2005: 35-36). In recent years, the number of
Nigerian women arrested in the UK on drug smuggling charges has
increased exponentially (Jeavans 2005). To understand these facts as
produced through a particular political economy requires an examination
of the key period of the 1980s-1990s and the colonial continuities that
it reveals. The oil-led economic boom of the 1970s was followed by a
collapse in the early 1980s that left both vast profits and utter
devastation in its wake, sharpened wealth and power gaps, and exposed
Nigeria to International Monetary Fund-imposed monetarist policies
(Falola and Ihonvbere 1985). The IMF policies forced the nation to abort
socially based development, leading to greater individualism,
privatization, and reliance on the market, which in the context of
Nigeria's exploitative political economy, equated to greater
desperation and corruption (Achebe 1984). Neoliberal structural
adjustment policies suddenly removed social programs relied upon by the
poor majority. As conditions worsened, state repression escalated to
contain the growing opposition, indicating how increased repression
coincides with increased immiseration and opposition (Federici and
Caffentzis 2003). Structural adjustment as a strategy for development
means increased cost of living, depressed wages, factory closures,
eviscerated universities, armed robbery, and new repressive roles for
police; it means the rise of a drug economy, with Nigerians increasingly
imprisoned around the world for drug offenses and currency trafficking,
as well as increases in prostitution, AIDS, and interpersonal violence;
and it means a sharp rise in state executions as the state's
response to community direct action against oil multinationals has been
to tie capital crimes to the disruption of oil production (Federici
1992).
[8] At independence from Britain in 1960, Nigeria was virtually
self-sufficient in food production; today it is dependent upon food
imports and structurally incapable of meeting its most basic needs
(Oronta and Douglas 2001). This historical devolution of the
post-colonial society in Nigeria reveals both the continuities with
colonial conquest and an inextricable entanglement with the history of
global energy production. When Nigeria accepted IMF intervention to
assist with its economic crisis in 1980, the IMF was not merely
responding to a crisis that is external to its practices. Neoliberal
developmentalism defines "underdevelopment" as a problem
internal to the societies in question, such as corruption related to the
state interfering with adjustments in the market mechanism by
subsidizing prices, setting wages, or establishing trade tariffs on
foreign capital. According to this definition of the problem, the IMF
and World Bank have ostensibly crafted stabilization plans that would
lessen the disequilibrium in the international balance of payments.
[9] In reality, however, they have sowed instability in Nigeria,
creating the conditions in which they can later intervene to
"fix" the problem they engineered in the first place. For
instance, Nigeria's involvement with the IMF and World Bank began
seven years prior to its independence from Britain. In 1953, the British
government commissioned the International Bank for Reconstruction and
Development (IBRD), one of the five World Bank agencies, to undertake a
study of the Nigerian economy, with the purpose of appraising "the
economic development prospects of Nigeria and recommend practical
measures for their realization" (Anunobi 1992: 85). Britain's
plan for its colony post-independence entailed primarily investment in
physical infrastructure rather than development of productive sectors,
with continued dependence on the export of unprocessed raw materials to
the imperialist states and the import of finished products from these
states (Falola 1987). The Nigerian economy today is largely controlled
by a handful of multinational corporations that go back to the colonial
era: Standard Oil, Shell-BP, Unilever, Siemmens, Barclays Bank, Bank of
America. Western capital was thus intimately involved in planning
Nigeria's transition to independence and thereby setting in motion
the instability that would become the conditions of possibility for IMF
and World Bank intercession in the nation's post-colonial economy.
[10] The energy industry specifically bears the imprint of the
colonial project. As a result of the British colonial state granting
petroleum concessions exclusively to British and British-allied
companies, Shell Oil received an oil concession in 1938 that covered the
entire 367,000 square miles of Nigeria. hen Shell discovered oil near
Oloibiri in the Niger River Delta, it ceded 95 percent of its total
concession, leaving itself the prime 16,000 square miles of the Delta
oil-producing region (Ibeanu 2002/2003). After the fall in oil prices in
the 1980s and the collapse of the Nigerian economy, the recovery plan
implemented by the IMF included deregulating the oil industry and
recruiting foreign private capital to the search for additional sources
of petroleum rent. As a result, the ten major oil companies operating in
the country began exploiting Nigeria's huge reserves of natural
gas. The result is that Nigeria continues to be further integrated into
the world economy much as it entered the sixteenth-century Atlantic
market: dependent, subordinate, and eviscerated.
[11] The oil-producing region of the Niger Delta bears the
consequences of this colonial history and most clearly illustrates what
it means to be subjected to the law of development. The global energy
industry impacts all Nigerians through the state's indebtedness to
foreign capital, the loss of social welfare supports, and the wantonness
of state violence generated by the particular manner of Nigeria's
interpellation into the political economy of energy--but the direct
effects of oil extraction and production is the particular burden of the
Delta communities. The oil industry destroys life: land is taken,
ecology is polluted, and people die prematurely from cancers and
respiratory and gastrointestinal diseases due to pollution and
malnutrition caused by the pollution. The poverty in the Delta is
well-documented: only twenty-seven percent of the people have access to
safe drinking water and about thirty percent have access to electricity;
there is one doctor per 82,000 people in the Delta, rising to 132,000
people per doctor in some areas. Meanwhile, the cost of living index is
the highest in the country and unemployment runs over thirty percent;
education levels are also low: only 30-40 percent of Nigerian children
in the Delta attend primary school (Ibeanu 2002/2003: 23).
[12] With political economic "development" imposing these
terms of premature death, neoliberal globalization in Nigeria is nothing
less than an assault on social reproduction, the capacity of a society
to reproduce itself. This assault in the Delta is best represented by
the long history of rebellion by women unifying across the numerous
ethnic borders that comprise the Delta region.
We are all women here. We are angry and grieved. That is why we
have come together. We cannot rely on our husbands anymore for this
fight, because they are not giving us the desired results. Moreover,
these days you know that it is the women that take up most of the
responsibilities. Me, I am a fisher woman. My only occupation is
fishing. But nowadays, when I go to the riverine areas, there are no
fish. Oil pollution and gas flaring has killed all the fish. The farmers
who farm the land cannot get anything from their land anymore because of
environmental degradation. Oil spillages have destroyed their lands. As
a result of all this, we are hungry. Our children are suffering. This
gas they are flaring is causing so many of us to die prematurely. Three
days ago, I lost my sister. She died from suffocation. She was just
crying, "My throat, my throat," and she died within thirty
minutes. They do not give our women employment, we are jobless and have
no money because our means of livelihood have been destroyed. We are
hungry, that's why we came here. Gas flaring has destroyed our
lives (Elizabeth Ebido, Itsekiri protest leader, quoted in Sprig 2002).
In the 1980s, women attacked oil industry installations and
personnel throughout the Delta. In the 1984 uprising, thousands of
women, the entire womenfolk of Ogharefe near Warri, seized control of an
oil installation at shift change, preventing the new shift from entering
and effectively holding hundreds of workers from the old shift hostage
inside the installation. The women threw off their clothes and with this
curse enforced their reparations claims for the destruction of land,
water, and trees in the community.
[13] Women were also prominent within MOSOP--the Movement for the
Survival of the Ogoni People--the umbrella group that led the struggle
against Shell in Ogoniland in the 1990s. In late April 1993, a large
group of women stopped Willbros, a U.S. pipeline contractor to Shell,
from bulldozing Ogoni farms. Willbros summoned the Nigerian military,
and MOSOP responded with a 10,000-strong demonstration within 48 hours
and drove the contractor out of Ogoniland (Turner 1997). The women of
the Delta continue to lead the movement against the dispossession of
their communal territory, of their capacity for reproduction. On July 8,
2002, some 600 women occupied the Chevron/Texaco export terminal at
Escravos in the Delta. The takeover brought forty percent of
Nigeria's oil production to a halt, costing the state $11 million
and the companies $2.5 million per day (Tobocman et al. 2000). This bold
move by the women was borne out of the increasingly desperate conditions
of dispossession. As Christina Mene of the Escravos Women Coalition
explained:
We want Chevron to employ our children. If Chevron does that we the
mothers will survive, we will see food to eat. Our farms are all gone,
due to Chevron's pollution of our water. We used to farm cassava,
okro, pepper, and others. Now all the places we've farmed are
sinking, we cannot farm. We cannot catch fishes and crayfish. That is
why we told Chevron that Escravos women and Chevron are at war (Turner
and Brownhill 2004: 67).
The Escravos take-over inspired twelve additional take-overs by
over 1,000 women. One hundred women paddled a massive canoe five miles
into the high seas to take over Chevron/Texaco's production
platform in Ewan oilfield (Turner and Brownhill 2004: 68). In
retaliation for the Escravos take-over, oil company security guards
raped dozens of women.
The gender entrapment of "development"
[14] Land expropriation and rape are equal parts of the seizure of
women's bodies in Nigeria and represents the gendered relations of
development under neoliberal restructuring. There are numerous
dimensions to this regime of premature death, including the ways in
which structural and historical violence (colonialism, neoliberalism,
energy production, etc.) becomes domesticated in the form of rape,
female genital mutilation, and the international trafficking in women
and children. This violence is tied both to the increased militarization
of Nigerian society, and to the complex ways in which state power
distorts and makes critical existing gender and ethnic power
differences. A Nigerian witness to the Biafran War (1967-1970),
Nigeria's civil war, recounts that married women who survived rape
during the hostilities could not return to their husbands.
These doomed women were paraded through the community, accused of
infidelity, the worst of crimes. They went through a cleansing ritual,
entailing sacrificing chickens and goats to appease the gods, to seek
forgiveness and reacceptance into the community. I was told that even if
the women's pleas were accepted, they were nonetheless stigmatized
for the rest of their lives, and their children and children's
children were stained by it (Turshen 1998: 8).
In the contemporary era of neoliberal restructuring, where women in
particular are forced into long circuits of migration in order to
survive, the relationship between sexual violence, state power, and the
struggle over resources is reworked in ways that reinscribe women's
bodies as objects of hostility. In September 2000, at least 3,000 young
Nigerian women awaited deportation from Italian prisons for having been
involved in prostitution (Angel-Ajani 2005). As the rape victims of a
war of another kind, many of these women were deported to Nigeria en
masse and publicly paraded and shamed upon their return.
[15] Gendered and sexualized violence is intrinsic to neoliberal
globalization, and as such, Nigerian women experience development
economics as "gender entrapment." Women in the Niger Delta are
traditionally the ones who farm the land and fish the waters to provide
for their families, making the ecological destruction of the energy
industry an assault that configures women's vulnerability acutely
and motivates Nigerian women to mobilize against this structural
violence. The nature of the counter-insurgency (rape) that responded to
their resistance, in turn, is gendered violence, marking women's
bodies as the terrain on which the developmental regime consolidates
itself. Sexual violence punishes women for resisting developmentalism;
rape thus signals the criminalization of dispossession under neoliberal
development. This process continues what Walter Rodney identified in his
classic study How Europe Underdeveloped Africa as the
"deterioration of the status of African women" subsequent to
colonialism (Rodney 1972: 226). Rodney noted that the "religious,
constitutional, and political privileges and rights" of African
women were more or less dismantled by colonialism and substituted with
intense exploitation (Rodney 1972: 227).
[16] The gender entrapment of neoliberal development is a component
of the more fundamental sexual politics of Western developmentalism. The
subordination of women, sexual violence, and the expropriation of the
land under the rubric of "development" are entwined as a core
part of the international system of domination and hegemony in the
post-colonial era. Greg Thomas summarizes Rodney's key
contributions for radical-critical thought on the legacy of European
conquest in Africa by pointing to how the "presuppositions of
political-economic 'development' and its sexual-erotic
politics of 'civilization'" constitute the generalized
structure of white supremacy's post-colonial lexicon. Rodney's
scrutiny of development discourse reveals the sexual subtext embedded in
its basic formulations in three ways. First, he recognizes that
underdevelopment and development act as "virtual moral
categories" (Rodney 1972: 3). Thomas notes that the supposed lack
of morality projected onto the underdeveloped, the colonized, and the
African are "projected foremost with regard to sexuality, which is
to say, a supposed sexual morality or immorality" (Thomas 2010:
152). Second, Rodney rejects the euphemism of "developing"
countries, instead calling attention to the active underdevelopment of
Africa by Western empire by showing how "developing" implies
that an individual, a country or a racial group is
"underdeveloped" "mentally, physically, morally, or in
any other respect" (Rodney 1972: 14). Third, Rodney identifies the
"social and socio-sexual politics of family organization"
underwriting Western capital's attempt to sublimate alternative
modes of production by rendering culture in economically reductionist
terms (Thomas 2010: 153).
[17] Thomas proceeds to employ Rodney to read Sigmund Freud, the
"paradigmatic spokesperson for sexual-erotic
'development' in the white bourgeois West," for his
contribution to political economic developmentalism. Thomas notes that
the developmental scheme for civilization, according to Freud, entails
normative sexual development of a most specific kind--and parallels the
economic development presupposed by Western political economy. In
Civilization and Its Discontents, Freud claims that "the
development of civilization" can only occur as a result of the
repression or redirection of sexual "instincts" or energy:
"Sublimation of instinct is an especially conspicuous feature of
cultural development" (Freud 1961: 44). Unsublimated, or
unrepressed, sexuality is the ingredient of "underdevelopment"
and a threat to "civilized development" (Thomas 2010: 155). As
Thomas discerns, the outcome of Freud's logic, the essential
cultural argument of Western imperialism masked as economic development,
is starkly counter-revolutionary:
Here, as we already know, civilization is obeying the laws of
economic necessity, since a large amount of the psychical energy which
it uses for its own purposes has to be withdrawn from sexuality. In this
respect civilization behaves towards sexuality as a people or a stratum
of its population does which has subjected one to its exploitation. Fear
of a revolt by the suppressed elements drives it to stricter
precautionary measures. A high-water mark in such a development has been
reached in our Western European civilization" (Freud 1961: 51)
(emphasis added). Freud is thus clear that while unrepressed sexuality
begets neurotic individuals, whole civilizations "under the
influence of cultural urges" will not experience "normative
development" (Freud 1961: 91). Hence, Western developmentalism in
Africa entails the demonization of development's obstacles
(matriarchal traditions, communal societies and land practices,
"informal" economies) or its consequences (dispossession,
displacement, poverty) as deviant and subversive sexualities (unruly
black women, Nigerian prostitutes or drug couriers in Western Europe).
[18] The development discourse of the IMF and the World Bank with
respect to Nigeria, and Africa more generally, affirms the insights of
Rodney and of Thomas' critical reading of Freud. In what would have
been brazen language in the years of the national liberation movements,
by the 1980s the heads of Euro-American capitalist states and financial
institutions were openly announcing initiatives to reduce the fertility
of Africa's poor. In 1986, A. W. Clausen, then president of the
World Bank, called for "fertility reduction" through a
"social contract" between African governments and African
parents, in which the state would provide economic and social welfare
support, while the parents would limit their family size (Caffentzis
1995: 31). Through the influence of the Bank, Nigeria adopted a
comprehensive demographic plan in 1989 called the National Population
Policy (NPP). In Nigeria, with the collapse of the economy, warnings of
an impending "population explosion" and the campaign for
population control expanded as structural adjustment intensified.
Foreign experts financed by the World Bank, the United States Agency for
International Development (USAID), and related agencies swarmed into
Nigeria conducting demographic surveys, running workshops on birth
control, and building surgical theaters to demonstrate the technique of
vasectomy; USAID provided millions of units of birth control pills; and,
most invidiously, the World Bank loaned millions of dollars to spread
family planning to the rural population (Federici 1995: 46).
[19] In a series of annual reports, the World Bank provided the
ideological justification for the central focus on the "population
threat," claiming demographic growth as the primary cause behind
the economic ills of the country. The Bank almost directly quoted Thomas
Malthus in warning that unchecked population growth would inevitably
reduce human-capital investment per capita; Malthus had famously written
at the turn of the nineteenth-century that high fertility might increase
gross output, but it tended to reduce output per capita (Clausen 1986;
Duden 1989). Despite the World Bank's conviction and the enthusiasm
of international capital and the Nigerian state for population control,
such policies were never actually implemented due to the strident
popular resistance to imposed birth control. The symbolism of the NPP,
nonetheless, gives the post-colonial Nigerian "a clear notion of
themselves in proportion to the power that they had lost" (Mbembe
2001: 26). Furthermore, as Silvia Federici points out, the IMF
structural adjustment program itself became a substitute means of
demographic control (Federici 1995: 52). In other words,
"population control" is accomplished not through
contraceptive, but rather through gendered development itself: control
over social reproduction relies on conditions of permanent crisis and
"demographic transition" through hunger, illness, ecological
destruction, premature death, and migration. The slow decline in African
mortality since the end of colonialism began to reverse in 1982, with
the crude death rate increasing in sub-Saharan countries since 1983.
More starkly, healthy life expectancy at birth has fallen almost an
entire decade in less than a decade, down to 41 years (WHO 2006). As of
2007, the total HIV infections in Nigeria were about 4 million, with
about 1.8 million children orphaned by AIDS (Chukwunyere n.d.)
[20] While the structurally dispossessed face criminalization as
survival under the legal regime governing Nigeria's political
economic transformations, the signs of development's progress
continue to rehearse Western imperialism's sex-laden politics of
"civilization." Freud's diagnosis of the obstacles to a
civilization's proper development, refracted through the World
Bank, international capital, and the post-colonial state, continues to
animate representations of Nigeria today. According to this discursive
regime, Nigeria's troubles stem from its unrepressed "cultural
urges," as Freud would have it, manifest in non-normative family
structures, deviant sexuality, the biological reproduction of
undisciplined erotic bodies, and the ongoing importance (despite
centuries of imperial efforts to the contrary) of women as economic
agents. In other words, Western capitalist states and development
institutions simultaneously impose the political economic conditions of
dispossession, suffering, and premature death and explain this
destruction in terms of African cultural backwardness.
[21] This combined subjection of the political economy of
"development," what I have termed here the gender entrapment
of neoliberal globalization, and the sexual-erotic politics of
"civilization" are evident in recent news reports describing
"Nigeria's 'respectable' slave trade" (Little
2004). In a series of articles appearing on the BBC website, reporting
on thousands of Nigerian young women "forced to work as prostitutes
in Mali 'slave camps,'" on the rescue of "about 200
'child slaves' from forests in the southwest," or the
"hundreds of girls from Nigeria sold into sexual slavery in Europe
each year [and] trafficked through England," so-called
"modern-day slavery" is constructed as a mundane feature of
contemporary Africa (BBC, 2010; Olukoya, 2003; Pannell, 2001). In this
narrative, African agents foist slavery upon an unwilling West and
Africa is construed, again, as the locus of criminality and barbarism.
For example, the articles assert, "human trafficking is not
something that happens on the criminal fringes of Nigerian society. It
is woven into the fabric of national life" (Little 2004: 2). The
articles portray the parents as willing participants in the
victimization of their children. One of the articles quotes the
president of UNICEF UK, David Puttnam, who states that what
"frustrates him here, in Nigeria, more than the poverty that is its
root cause, is the attitude that accompanies it." As Puttnam puts
it, "develop some determination [a]nd this exploitation of children
could be tackled and Nigeria could be a really successful nation"
(Little 2004: 3) (emphasis added).
[22] This narrative maintains that "modern day slavery,"
and the deviant sexual practices subtending "slavery" and
"trafficking," is a product of African culture. Because this
thesis is basic to the very cultural milieu in which it is articulated,
Western white supremacist society, articles such as the ones cited above
can routinely point to the dire poverty in Nigeria as a reason why
children and young women migrate or are trafficked abroad without
affecting the basic premise of cultural difference as the root cause for
why black female sexuality is available for exploitation or
accumulation. The articles repeatedly note "almost all [Nigerians
working in commercial sex in Italy] come from Edo state in southern
Nigeria ... [and yet,] no research has been done into why so many come
from this one state ... " (De Blank 2005: 1). It hardly requires
much investigation or journalistic integrity to consider the connection
between the conditions of possibility for international human
trafficking and the evisceration of the Niger River Delta region, in
which Edo state is situated, by the multinational energy industry. Yet
nowhere have I seen reports that suggest a relationship between these
two processes. Absent a political economic contextualization identifying
the continuities between colonization and the present, the gesture to
poverty as a cause of trafficking is in fact a component of the cultural
racism thesis: African cultural deficiencies produce predatory economic
processes that cannot support civilized democracies. As Freud would have
it: "If the development of civilization has such a far-reaching
similarity to the development of the individual and if it employs the
same methods, may we not be justified in reaching the diagnosis that,
under the influence of cultural urges, some civilizations, or some
epochs of civilizations ... have become 'neurotic'?"
(Freud 1961: 91). Or, as the UNICEF UK head Puttnam put it, "Half
of you feels sympathy [for the poverty and the victims of trafficking,
b]ut the other half wants just to shake the people here and say
look--this is a large, wealthy, powerful country. Put the structures in
place. Develop some determination ... " (Little 2004: 3).
Conclusion: Abandoning the paradigm
[23] The secret to the operation of the Western development
paradigm is that it brooks "no recourse to the disruption of
people's lives by these activities" (Martinot and Sexton 2003:
173). Indeed, attempts by the international community to remedy the
spectacular effects of neoliberal development tend to deploy and thereby
reaffirm the logic of developmentalism itself. The high-water mark of
publicity for the situation in the Niger Delta came as a result of the
Nigerian state's execution of the renowned writer and Ogoni
activist Ken Saro-Wiwa for his agitation against Shell Oil's
depredations in Ogoniland. Spectacular events such as the hanging of
Saro-Wiwa--or even the conditions which he and his comrades tirelessly
worked to expose, such as Shell Oil's impunity in the instant
incineration of a thousand Delta villagers by an oil pipeline explosion,
for instance--does not effectively critique the paradigmatic logic of
developmentalism which rests on widely distributed, accepted, and
racialized principles of historical imperfection
("civilization" vs. "barbarism") remedied through
modernization, nature and human beings as resources for economic growth,
"development" understood in economic reductionist terms, and
the market as the privileged scene of the social. That is to say, to
submit to the mandate to illustrate the gender entrapment of development
hides its daily operation "as contempt, as terror," its steady
historical process of consuming human life and environment across the
generations (Martinot and Sexton 2003: 173). The spectacles of
neoliberal development, from state executions to the contours of gender
entrapment outlined above, misrepresent this routine violence not
because they are anomalous (which they are not), nor because they are
the tip of the iceberg in terms of the varieties of premature death
(which they are). Rather, they are a misrepresentation because the
spectacle necessarily obscures the banal and always depicts the violence
of modernity itself inadequately.
[24] Along these lines, the present analysis remains preliminary,
provisional, even remedial, the necessary but insufficient grounds for
intervention. A decisive inquiry into the criminalization of Nigerian
women must do more than confront the "negative underside of the
dazzling triumphs and achievements of [Western society's] now
purely biologized order of being and of things," the overall costs
of which Gerald Barney has termed "the global problematique"
(Wynter 2006: 132). Sylvia Wynter refers to it as mistaking the map for
the territory: confronting the astounding costs of the Western imperial
project without "coming to grips with the real issue (the territory
rather than its maps" is akin to a physician treating a
patient's symptoms and not the root causes of embodied illness
(Wynter 2006: 161). Wynter succinctly suggests: "The major proposal
that I shall put forward in this chapter is that if Black Africa is to
reinvent itself as a dynamic twenty-first century civilization, it might
very well have to get rid of the concept of 'development'
altogether" (Wynter 1996: 299). The presuppositions of political
economic "development" and its sexual-erotic politics of
"civilization," reviewed above are central to what Rodney
called "the generalized structure of white thought" and are
largely taken for granted in this global system of dominance (Rodney
1972: 111).
[25] Having established a critique of the manner in which present
development discourse and historical process constructs the material and
symbolic conditions of possibility for the criminalization of Nigerian
women, we can then work on dismantling the paradigmatic confines of
"development" itself. To properly situate the production of
Nigerian women as the "new folk devils," severed as they are
from an indigenous context stigmatized and concealed by the ideological
formation of every discipline of Western epistemology, we need to
thoroughly deconstruct how the race and sex underpinnings of empire
function through the fatal coupling of criminalization and neoliberal
development's dispossession. Analyzed thusly, we would see that
criminalized migration shares a seam with women's mobilization
against multinational oil companies in Nigeria, which in turn is part of
a long history of resistance to land expropriation led by African women,
bringing into view a radically different understanding of the erotic
dimensions of human community than that promulgated by Western
developmentalism (Gibson 2004; Lorde 1984).
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS. Thanks to Ann Kibbey and the anonymous reviewer
for helping me improve this essay. Special gratitude to Kim
Hester-Williams for her ongoing support.
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Contributor's Note
TRYON P. WOODS is Assistant Professor of Sociology, Anthropology,
and Crime & Justice Studies at the University of Massachusetts,
Dartmouth, where he is affiliated with the African & African
American Studies and Women's Studies programs. He has worked with
community-based organizations on HIV/AIDS prevention, supportive housing
for drug users, and police accountability. His articles have appeared in
American Studies, Radical Teacher, Seattle Journal of Social Justice,
and the Journal of Race, Gender, and Poverty. His research examines
antiblackness in two parallel contexts: the politics of race and sex
violence in North America and anti-colonial social movements across the
African Diaspora.