This paper situates Indigenous social reproduction as a duality; as both a site of primitive accumulation and as a critical, resurgent, land-based practice. Drawing on three distinct cases from British Columbia, Canada, Aotearoa New Zealand and Bua, Fiji, we illustrate how accounting techniques can be a key mechanism with which Indigenous modes of life are brought to the market and are often foundational to the establishment of markets. We argue that accounting practices operate at the vanguard of primitive accumulation by extracting once invaluable outsides (e.g. Indigenous land and bodies) and rendering these either valuable or valueless for the social reproduction of settler society. The commodification of Indigenous social reproduction sustains the conditions that enable capitalism to flourish through primitive accumulation. However, we privilege Indigenous agency, resistance and resurgence in our analysis to illustrate that these techniques of commodification through accounting are not inevitable. They are resisted or wielded towards Indigenous alternatives at every point.
History
Publication title
Environment and Planning A
Volume
56
Issue
1
Pagination
1-18
ISSN
0308-518X
Department/School
Accounting
Publisher
Pion Ltd
Publication status
Published
Place of publication
207 Brondesbury Park, London, England, Nw2 5Jn
Rights statement
Copyright 2021 the authors
Socio-economic Objectives
139999 Other culture and society not elsewhere classified, 189999 Other environmental management not elsewhere classified