The Triumph of the Commons in Barbuda - podcast episode cover

The Triumph of the Commons in Barbuda

Sep 15, 202238 min
--:--
--:--
Download Metacast podcast app
Listen to this episode in Metacast mobile app
Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more

Episode description

Andrew sits down with the gang to explain the history of resilience and community that helped Barbuda overcome centuries of colonial incompetence.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Transcript

Speaker 1

Hey, welcome to it could happen here podcasts, but things fallen apart and putting them back together. And this is another Andrew episode. So hello Ulu, yes, greetings, we have we have we have Chris, we have James, we have myself, and we have Andrew. Obviously who I'm going to hand the reins off too awesome. So hello again to another

episode of me talking about different stuff. Um and quite fittingly, considering to these the d that Queenlizabeth has passed into the pits of hell Um, we are we are deeply as as a citizen under the Commonwealth, we are deeply saddened by the loss we do. Listen there reached out to me today and I am okay, guys. Today we will be discussing a current member of the Commonwealth UM, one of quite a few twin island nations in the Caribbean,

that being Antigua and Barbuda, and more specifically Barbuda. Barbuda is an example of African resilience. It's an example of a society in touch with this environment. It's an example of the capability of the Commons as an institution, and it's an example of sticking it to the Crown. To be quite honest as you nice, I mean, I'm excited to learn more about that. How how yes, So I don't think many people know about bob Uda and its history. I doubt most people could place it on a map.

But it's it. It represents quite the interesting story. So to begin, I should probably explain what what is a Barbuda. Bobbuda is an island located in the Eastern Caribbean, forming part of the sovereign state of Antigua and Barbuda. It's located north of the island of Antigua and it's part

of the Leeward Islands for the West Indies. It comprises about sixty two square miles, so it is about sixty two square miles which is a hundred and sixty kilometers, and it's one of the flattest islands in the Caribbean. It's soils are very shallow and in foods. Island is a very arid island with very little rainfall and very frequent routs. It's scrub willderness is roamed by day and pigs and descendants of the animals early European traders and

settlers would have imported. It also has a pre settlement, ever green woodland that consists of white cedar, turpentine and white wood, alongside columnar cactus and thorny shrubs and grassy glades and soils that have been another species that have grown up in soils that have been degraded by the clearance of charcoal burning and crazing and just general human activity. Most bob Udans, I would say, engage in shifting cultivation,

but none of them are full time farmers. The countryside is mostly uninhabited because the law required that all bob Udans lived in or near the islands one village, which is Quadrington, and there, according to twenty eleven census, there were roughly one thirty four people on the island. Of course, that has changed in recent times, and we'll get into that shortly. Barbuda is yet another example of a distinctive community emerging out of the colonial era that swept through

the Caribbean. I've mentioned the Maroons before, the different marine communities that have existed on the different Caribbean islands and in Guyana and Surnam, but I think bob Uda and their story represents really the diversity of how colonialism manifested um in the region. Barbula's people have a sense of identity and attachment to locality that is I think very

distinctive and very unique among people of the Caribbean. Not to say that the rest of us don't have a sense of identity or an attachment locality, but their story and the tradition reaches back over two centuries of near independence and quite significant levels of autonomy, which was unheard of in most of the Caribbean due to the legacy of slavery. Representing a very close knit and traditional community.

Probably Runs approach to using and student the resources reflects that long legacy of isolation, of ecological constraint being on such a small island, of familial closeness having such a small population, and of social interdependence. Considering the series of administrators that they had dealt with and how each of those administrators neglected or ignored them. Bobby Runs, both whom and abroad, are still very much attached to their island

because they have long held in common. So we'll be diving into a brief history of exactly how they reached this point, what institutions they've developed for common ownership and communal land use, and how emigration has played a role in that, and unfortunately, how the combination of Hurricane Irma and the doctrine and the shock doctrine have contributed to

their current situation. So for more than two hundred years, from the late seventeenth century, Barbuda was leased by the crown to one family, the Cardringtons, hence the name of the village being Cardrington. The originally c was a guy named Christopher Cardrington. He was the governor of the Lead World Islands and his ears lived in England, so they

pretty much neglected it after year died. Barbuda would have supplemented the lucrative sugar states that Cardrickton had an antigua with timber and ground provisions and fish and livestock and draft animals. Barbuda, being surrounded by coral reefs, often had ships wrecked near the island, and so they also salvage resources from lead ships and so as late as in the eighteen fifties, the Cardrington's were getting four thousand pounds a year from Barbuda and stock, and three hundred pounds

a year from salvage in operations on the island. That's just over sixty three thousand pounds today per year, and it just demonstrates, of course, and even though they were more independent than bost other enslaved people US, the island

wasn't as profitable. They were still being exploited. Initially the island was only worked by a few indentured whites, but then when enslaved people were brought in from Africa, the enslaved population began to rise, and they began to establish that sort of culture and community that we see to this day. Because they were neglected because the island was

very little inhabited. They housed and they fed themselves through their own efforts and well basically spared of the rigors of the plantation regiment because of how unprofitable the island was because it's soils were so sandy and arid and unfertile.

So between eighteen hundred and eighteen thirty two, being free in many respects, probably this population was able to rise from three hundred to five hundred and able to a cohesive creole community whose solidarity was able to thwart the efforts of local overseers and absentee proprietors to try to get them to labor on anti United States or to get them to be more quote and quote productive um for their overseers because they had such a several hundred

strong community on that island that had established itself for generations. No overseer, no manager, could just pull up in there and just say try and cooce them into doing what he wanted them to do. This is installed contrast to a lot of the other Criban islands, where managers and overseers had a lot more presence and a lot more power to destroy families, to split up communities, to ferment divisions.

Because the island just they basically neglected it, and in that neglect, they took advantage of that nicol of the material conditions that created that neglect to strengthen their community bonds and to strengthen their autonomy. As emancipation came around, car Drinton himself even was like, wow, good for them pretty much because almost all of them, who were, like to quote him directly, one united family so attached to bob Udell that force alone or extreme drought can alone

take them from that island. In other words, as an exploit. As a displaced indigenous African people, they reforged the connection to the new land. They inhabited and rooted themselves in that land. The one, one particular tradition they have is the burial of ones in Biblical Code on the island itself, and so that has been going on for generations with a new child is born and the Embiblical code is

buried on the island. And so even Mobudens move abroad, they still have that strong tie to the island itself. So after emancipation ruled around in eighteen thirty four, Bobby, their life didn't change that much. That the transition from slavery to being free was not as abrupt or as consequential as it was in other parts of the Cariban.

They didn't become landowners, they didn't necessarily get any political power automatically because probably there was still being assigned to crown leases which had certain um agreements and contracts in place with the crown, that kind of thing. But they were I mean, they were still being exploited, but things were a bit easier for them to transition compared to

other places. In eighteen thirty five, agreements had secured Bobby the unemployment on contracturn Empress enterprises at specific rates of pay, but after the contract had lapsed, it really really voted to a sort of relationship of coersion. They wouldn't pay um, they wouldn't pay them their wages. They would take quote and quote ricalcu and prob Udans and transport them to antigue and jails or plantations, and they would continue to

just siphon off of the island. One of the only exports really on the island at the time was cattle, mostly for Cardrington's estates and Antigua cattle, sheep and firewood. And the people themselves were engaged in cultivating provisions yams, potatoes, corn and supplying their own farming history. They were including the necessities. So Abudans would continue with their different occupations, their hunting and they're fishing, their provision intending their cutting

wood and put in charcoal and salvage and wrecks. Sometimes the would they would be employed by proprietors with governments, but most times they either disregarded these authorities or acted and opened the siance and so each ones the state would often complain about prob Uduans and their disregard for the crowns property and the estates property. They would often be accused of coaching Cortinon's cattle, and so they will. There was one attempt in particular to seize all their

guns and send them off of the island. And so when the government did step in and condemned Bobby Duns for you know, taking cattle when they wanted to take cattle, Bobby Duns basically pull a reverse card and demanded redress against interference with their livelihoods. They basically were like, I'll quote one petition that was written by Bobby Duns in eighteen We are deprived of the use of our firearms, where by most of us live in shooting any large fish,

tootle or wild birds. We are told to take out licenses. Yet if we have seen with a gun, not even shooting, we're taken before the Mages Street of Antigua and severely punished punished for it. Our little gardens are gone to waste, and if such as are still in a little cultivation, was to be injured by weather, and we, by sickness, are not able to have the fences repaired directly. It has taken and Brune say nour intention is willing to

catch the wild beast sub Mr Cardington's. Eventually, I guess the Cardington's got tired of having to not profit as well as they could have, of having to deal with these independent people. Their relinquished on their least. In eighteen seventy they took all their horses and cattle off the island, leaving only the day and sheep because he currently round up day and sheep as effectively at that point, and

they basically they left um. And I was find it interested when Europeans bring like a bunch of European animals wherever they go. It's like, let me just go and set up in a state here in a middle of no way and introduce a bunch of deer and sheep and rabbits and stuff. I mean, I think it happened in Australia as well. They just let a bunch of rabbitshes school loose just for hunting. It's like, oh, let me like get a hobby that's not shooting animals. But anyway,

so because Bobby, they was seen as unprofitable. Each lea see that you know, got their least from the crown, got it its resources as much as they could and neglected its inhabitants. William and Robert Dougal of William and Robert Dougal's probably with the island company never invested the annual one point five or one hundred pounds required by their least only seven hundred pounds rather than they promised. Six thousand worth of stock were introduced with Bailey with

barely a score. Pubulans employed as crazy as and even though they allegedly attempted to plant certain coffee cooler, cuckoo another fruits, they neglected that too, and eventually a derelict Bobido was forfeited to the crown for a non payment of friend. When a government official visited the island, we found the day were almost exterminated. The satin wooden log would be depleted, the cattle were famished, the fences would disrepair.

They had four mens around up about horses, ate, a cattle and a bunch of cows, and the two products that existed on the island had long since become filthy and faiously overgrown not only with bush but dense tickets.

Dr Dougal's gunners also apparently had a really bad sense of aim, because a lot of defences were just riddled with bullets, and so because the island and the people were starved and degraded by the dow calls UM, the Colonial Office had you know, revoked their lease and basically excused the few villages were taken some of the cattle

for themselves. Babbulans had also protested the fact that whenever these leases would put up on their island, they would always be taking their stock, closing their provision grounds, trying to evict them basically doing everything they could be hostile towards people on the island, and so only their own traditional hunting and farming and and stuff enabled Baby Lands

to survive. Of course, government being the government didn't really care about the people that much, so even though the lease holders were gone, didn't really get much out of it the people that is. So after determination lease, the Cluonial Government, the Leeward Islands Cluonial Government and Antigua basically took over the island and they established the government stock

farm on some cotton plots in nineteen three UM. They gave some grants to pay for fencing and cutting wood and cotton experiments and cattle purchases and mule breeding, and the Bobby runs took the government gres and lands for their own purposes and basically enclosed a portion of that land and left it for the government stock and left the rest of the pasture, the richest parts of the

pasture for their own horses and cattle and donkeys. So while the government had to deal with like this small portion of land with like some very weak, insufficient meadow, the rest of the community was able to flourish with a nice, rich pasture for their cattle. And still despite that, the stock farm, the government stock farm, still flourished with a hundred and sixty one horses, a hundred to eat cattle,

and five mules. And then the cotton surprisingly also became profitable on the island um I called a crop that really didn't flourish. They are told during slavery, was now trying to pick up. In the beginning of the early century. We began shipping cotton note and employing a bunch of Bobby Dan's, and now Bobby there was being scheme is

a super profitable place. However, because of that cotton boom, Bobby Dan's were able to buy passage overseas, they were able to raise the standard of living, and it ended up causing a labor shortage that led to conflict. After a shipwreck off the island. The island manager went to check out what was going on with the salvage, and and he caught a bunch of Bubu Dan's salvage in but salvage and for their own profits instead of his profits.

And so, in retaliation, in retaliation for him trying to stop them from salvage and for themselves, the Bobby Duns burnt his boat and his wagon, and so in retaliation for that, the governor of Antigo started to impose these previously uninforced rents and cultivated plots, so like he wanted to charge like five shillings per equal per year, and

he also doubled animal head taxes. And so by introducing these taxes, introducing these rents, the government's basically trying to get not just to punish the people for you know, daring to be free, but also trying to force them to work on their cotton plantation. Of course, Bob you don's, having lived so freely for so long, the want to work on these cotton plantations, especially not after slavery um.

And so the people petitioned the crown against this kind of semi intentioned suitude that the governor was trying to introduce, and it seems that Mother Nature was on their side because they want their case. Due to drought, all the crops were basically ruined by drought, cutting on cotton profits, um cutting on cattle profits, cuttling on crops on corn profits. And all this happened in nineteen six and then in Barbado was hit by a hurricane more severe than they've

ever seen before. And so that brief period where Barbarido was seen as striking google for the government came to an end, and Bob Dan's continued to cling on to their customary modes subsistence, of self reliance, of survival of their plots and their livestock and their fishing grounds, of continuing to be their own masters, because two d and fifty years of experience had taught them how unreliable and exploitative all these other alternatives that bosses non natives that

the government was trying to introduce woo to them, and they learned that only ownership in common would guarantee their access and guarantee the protection of their island from environmental exploitation.

As as we get to the interesting part, because they had already long thought to themselves as owners of the island as possessing the island for themselves, even though on people it wasn't the key, even though on people they were being handled between the Crown and the different lease holders, that the Crown would introduce Barbuda to Barbuda's being so small, being so homogeneous, having such meager soils, having such strong and type connections and bonds, they saw it as all

of theirs collectively. It wasn't like and when I say strong connections, family bonds, I don't mean it in the sense that some of the other in lands in the Caribbean. And was sort of puzzled out because in the Caribbean there are lands that are held by certain families and it passes down the family and going on for generations. But it wasn't this idea that all these particular families owned the land. It was that all of them together

wound the land serious real communal landownership. They'd use the land for generations, to raise ground provisions, to hunt there and wild pigs, to keep goats and sheep, to keep cattle, to cut firewood, to fish and so on. They had no documents and said that they had these collective rights in the island, and yet they all insisted with one voice, the Barbuda was theirs salon. No outsiders could tell them otherwise.

And furthermore, they had proven again and again and again that outside proprietors were powerless in the face of their attempts to run the island for themselves, because they would continue to graze their cattle wherever they wanted to is the cattle. They'll continued to fish wherever they wanted to fish, salvage whatever they wanted to salvage, cultivate wherever they wanted to cultivate. Who's gonna stop them, You know, clearly nobody. They couldn't even get outside, It couldn't even get like

a rent out of prob you done so. In nineteen twenty, Barbudans had gotten legal entitlement roughly half of the island, and by three they controlled futually all of its resources, basically the facto. Unfortunately, against their will. Honestly, Antigua and Barbuda were joined together by putting administrators, and so Antigua

and Barbuda is the country that exist city. But one of the primary concerns of Brobudans were that they were able, were that they be able to maintain soul ownership, soul control,

soul compunal control over the lands of Barbuda. Land ownership has been an issue that bobby udn't have had with Antigua for a very very long time now, for decades now, and really all bob Udan's want is to maintain their common ownership for themselves alone, and so they have maintained that through the Barbudaan Council defending the land and declaring that no land in Barbuda can be sold or developed without the permission of the Bubbudan Council, and so down.

To explain basically how common land use boots in Barbuda, there are two distinctive and useful move of land use shifting cultivation for provision grounds and open range pastured for livestock. Because the soil is so weak, shifting cultivation is a necessity, and so after one or two years of planting exhausted soil, they move their fencing, they move their grounds of between half an acre to two or three acres, and plants

they are sweet potatoes, yarms, me is beans, pigeon ps, squash, peanuts, etcetera. Elsewhere, So the old land could you know, regenerate, but this constant cultivation is something that occurs. The grants really no permanent rights any one individual. You do have use rights, it's the principle of use of fruct over the areare cultivating, but you don't have permanent ownership over that piece of

land that you're cultivating. And they have that system in place because they recognize living on the island for the generations that bob ut As ecology is extremely fragile, extremely limited UM. Its resources are limited, and so they have to safeguard there um their sustenance for generations to come. Yeah, it's fascinating, Actually it's really I didn't know anything about that. Yeah, yeah,

it really is. Similarly with them with the slash and boom cultivation, they also had the management of open range livestock being very much unrestricted. UM. They're actually feral cattle that exists on the island in addition to the more

teamed and pen animals UM. And so how they basically they allow all the animals, you know, mixed and mingo of different families of different individuals would have their specific cattle or horses or sheep or whatever a marked or branded but for the most part they they've maintained this sort of open range husbandry because it helps to sustain

their unity. It helps to maintain their strengthen their social bonds and their community solidarity, to basically ensure that everyone has taken care of in a place that is so scant resources. Lastly, through one of the ways that they maintain in the balance of the island is through it's

through emigration. The population has basically stayed at that level because they've stayed within the limits of the resources they have on the island, and so young Baby don't have had to leave um the island um while still maintaining their communal use rights to the land. And then eventually they would make remittances of money or resources and periodic returns that would help to introduce you know, healthcare resources

and housing resources and education resources to the island. Just another day, like completely isolated from the outside world, living in this sort of bubble. They do still have that exchange going on. Most of the immigrants live in three primary communities seeing John's Antigua of course, seeing as it's the neighbor um. A lot of them are in New

York City. I mean a lot of Korean people in general in New York City, but Bob Dun's are in New York City, and all of them also live in Britain in Leicester as part of the West Indian exodus that took place all the way back in the late

nineteen fifties. Yeah, so sort of wrap things up here. Um. Their communities and their solidarity have allowed them to cope with a harsh environment and to successfully navigate a succession of misinformed aloof sometimes actually hostile and mostly incompetent proprietors,

managers and administrators. Being so unified and holding themselves in solidarity, they have managed to maintain their traditional resource ownership, their communal land tenure, and their fragile ecology completely and totally, um rejecting the assocutions that the economist carried hard and made about the tragedy of the commons, it has not been a tragedy for what you've done. It has been

a triumph until recently. Unfortunately, in September seventeen, Hurricane Irma damaged and destroyed of the island's buildings and infrastructure, and as a result, all of the island's inhabitants had to evacuate Antigo, leaving Barbuda empty for the first time in hundreds of years. Wow, I mean two years later. By February,

most of the residents have returned to the island. However, the Prime Minister of Antigo, Gaston Alfonso Brown, he's been leading since UM, has been making moves essentially to privatize Barbuda. His background before entering politics was being a banker and a businessman, and he seems to be employing the shock doctor and tactic of using environmental catastrophe and social displacement

two accelerate capitalism. Essentially, after you know, hurricaneum I swept through Um and posted residents became homeless, communication systems came went went down Um and taking Bobula God relief pounds of relief for Barbuda. Um. That's not very much, not very much at all, Um, but it would take over

a hundred million dollars to rebuild the homes. In the infrastructure in barbdell Um, the old critical infrastructure that existed, the food supply, the medicine, the shelter, electricity, water communications, waste management and as one person said, UM did are active anti in Barbula's National Office of the Disaster Services film O Melon he said, in my twenty five years of disaster management, I've never seen something like this. It is optimistic to think anything like this be rebuilt in

six months. They have to rebuild entirely all of their public utilities. UM. And so essentially what Prime Minister Gaston or Funds who Brown is trying to do is revoke communal land ownership, allow the residents to buy some land and use the rest to basically introduce UM resorts and who Tells and other to risk attractions to help fund the rebuilding efforts. But of course we know the way that money is actually going to go. And that's as

far as I know about the situation. UM. Unfortunately don't have any connections in Antiguan Barbuda yet UM, but unfortunately that is what it's been going on in another example basically of disaster capitalism trying to cease and accumulates through violence and for exploitation as usual. I hope that you know, we've seen and been inspired by Barbuda's efforts, and I hope that probably don't able to continue to prove themselves

resilient in the face of this disaster. That's fascinating. And do you know, like I'm interested in these diasporic communities, like you said, there's one in Leicester and stuff. It's like, do they still have like a very strong community coherence like when they when they go elsewhere and to like like you said, they tend to gather in like certain spots. Be interested in like how those folks I guess dealt with a very different life in like New York or

Leicester or wherever. Right. Well, Um, like the Caribbean people who have emigrated, we do tend to concentrating suitain places where we already have family connections. Um. I think most Scribbean people have at least a relative living abroad. Yeah, an uncle, a great uncle, second cousin, the cousin whatever. Um,

And so it sort of builds from there. And so you try and piece that you create, like a piece of home, and sort of settle and concentrate in those areas and live in those areas and support each other in those areas. Yeah, and that I would say helps with the adjustment. Yeah, yeah, that makes a lot of sense. Yeah. Um. So you can find me on YouTube dot com slash Andreism, on pat dot com slash Saying True, and on Twitter

dot com slash and discore scene true. If you are Bob, you done, Please don't as day to reach out to me. I would love to learn more about the situation going on and wish all all the best solidarity. It Could Happen here as a production of cool Zone Media. For more podcasts from the Cool Zone Media, visit our website cool zone media dot com, or check us out on the I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you

listen to podcasts. You can find sources for It Could Happen Here, updated monthly at cool zone Media dot com slash sources. They thanks for listening.

Transcript source: Provided by creator in RSS feed: download file
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android