What do Australian Historians and Intellectuals
Have to Say About Globalisation?
WILD
POLITICS - A MANIFESTO
By Susan Hawthorne
The New Economic World Order is the last of a long line of coercive methods of control. The process of industrialisation has been a process of ever-increasing interference in the lives of people - from structured and alienated work for wages to medicalisation of women's bodies and souls, now extended to interference with life processes.
Patriarchal capitalism
seeks to control the wild elements that have, up until now, resisted control.
We need to develop a wild politics to resist control over these wild elements
including: wild seeds, wild land, wild farming, wild peoples, wild women,
wild reproduction, wild sexuality and wild markets.
WILD TYPES
Wild types is
a term used in genetics that identifies unregulated genetic structures. Wild
types occur in all living organisms and are not the result of human interference
through breeding or hybridisation. Wild types are the source of genetic diversity
and critical to the continuing biological diversity of the planet.
WILD SEEDS
Wild seeds are
the seeds of plants that remain in the hands of people who use them for subsistence
or a self-sustaining lifestyle. Wild seeds are in evidence in every country,
culture and geographical region of the world. Aboriginal peoples use wild
seeds and their products to produce food, medicines, resin, implements, decoration
and cultural products. The people of India use the Neem tree for over 200
different purposes. The Amazonian peoples use wild plants to sustain their lives. Traditional
healers use wild products - seeds, herbs, roots - to heal the body. Indigenous
peoples and peasants from all over the world use wild seeds and wild plants.
These seeds and plants are under threat from the TRIPS, which threatens to
control this source of diversity through a universal application of the US
patent law.
WILD LAND
Wilderness regions
and commons are lands that remain untamed and outside the ambit of private
ownership. Wilderness areas are harvested through collecting and hunting by
their traditional collective owners for medicinal and food stuffs. Wilderness
is land not subjected to invasive methods of cultivation. A wilderness is
minimally affected by human intervention in its ecosystems and it sustains
a wide range of wild seeds, wild plants and wild animals.
WILD FARMING
Wild farming
is productive work done for the purpose of subsistence. Wild farming depends
on a detailed knowledge of local conditions and of the environment. Wild farming
is self-sustaining, non-invasive and regenerative. Examples include mosaic
burning patterns developed by Aborigines, use of medical substances extracted
from plants and animals, irrigation based on natural cycles of flooding, hunting
and herding small numbers of animals.
WILD PEOPLES
Minority populations,
Indigenous and tribal peoples are considered "wild" peoples by bodies
such as the Genome Project. They are subjected to many kinds of tests, such
as scraping from the inside of cheeks as a method of collecting banks of genetic
information on human gene pools. Having suffered genocidal policies through
murder, environmental destruction, removal from their lands and cultural and
linguistic annihilation, this is just one more policy threatening the existences
of these peoples. They are regarded by multinational institutions as wild
peoples because they resist being drawn into the capitalist market economy,
as they adhere to a politics rooted in reverence for the land, its resources
and its ecology.
WILD WOMEN
Women are regarded
as wild types because they too, until recently, have remained a small part
of the market economy, and in large numbers they still produce what is regarded
as unproductive work connected to the household, rearing, caring and cultivating.
Women are also wild because again, until recently, reproduction has remained
an untamed and uncontrolled aspect of existence. Women's wildness is under
threat from coercive population control policies, from the new reproductive
and contraceptive technologies and from a host of other medicalisations of
their lives.
With so-called
assisted reproduction methods there are increasing levels of control over
all aspects of life. Children are also prevented by more and more invasive
means including the pill, IUDs, Norplant, Depo-provera, vaccination, and sterilisation.
Assisted reproduction includes: IVF, GIFT, microinjection, amniocentesis,
chorionic villi sampling, ultrasound and the mechanisations of birth. All
of these procedures control who is
born and add value to the resulting child through R&D, labour and technical
interference. The intended result is that no wild children - no children with
visible or hidden disabilities - be born. Such children, because of their
disabilities, are regarded as expendable because they too cannot easily be
drawn into the market economy and productive waged labour.
WILD REPRODUCTION
This is still
the norm, but with increasing interference and intervention in reproduction,
wild reproduction will become a rebellion and a resistance. Refusal to subject
oneself to amniocentesis to find out the sex of the child, or genetic screening
of "unwanted" or "undesirable" genes will result in sanctions.
In particular, where such refusal is followed by the birth of a wild disabled
child, no social services will be provided. Wild reproduction means not knowing
and refusing to know the sex or genetic characteristics of a child. Wild reproduction
allows for wild types.
WILD SEXUALITY
Wild sexuality
is sexuality that refuses to conform to the model of homogenised eroticisation.
This means a refusal to play the power games expected of women and men, or
refusal to imitate these models. Wild sexuality refuses patriarchal definitions
of institutions such as marriage, heterosexuality, dominance/submission sexualities
and sexualities that are commodified - among them prostitution, sex tourism,
pornography, queer and marketed sex commodities such as the "toys"
and implements of sado-masochism.
WILD MARKETS
Some economies
exist outside the mainstream. Wild markets are markets not based on monetary
exchange. They include reciprocal arrangements between people or donated labour
or goods, donated not on the basis of tax deductibility or on self-serving
notions of "aid". Wild markets include the exchange of information
between wild women and/or wild peoples engaging in wild politics. Wild markets
include exchanges between communities engaging in wild farming.
WILD POLITICS
Wild politics
embraces a philosophy which refuses co-option into patriarchal and capitalist
institutions as outlined above. Wild politics is life affirming, values diversity,
self-reliance, creativity, and the sustaining of cultural traditions that
support equality. Wild politics is rooted in the earth and in knowledge of
local conditions and environments. Wild politics encourage productivity that
gives as much (or more) as it takes, and is not based on growth and accumulation.
Wild politics is feminist and in keeping with the resistances of Indigenous
peoples, the poor and the marginalised. It resists coca-cola colonisation
and accumulation, over consumption, fundamentalist and repressive ideologies,
mass communications, the military and interference by international scientific,
monetary and cultural elites. Wild politics is a politics of joy.
Many thanks to
all the women at the Peoples' Perspectives on "Population" conference
whose ideas and discussions were central to the writing of this piece.
Susan Hawthorne,
Comilla, Bangladesh, 15 December 1993