Artículo de revista
Decolonizing local planning through new social cartography: making Black geographies visible in a plantation context in Colombia
Fecha
2021Registro en:
01436597
Universidad Autónoma de Occidente
Repositorio Educativo Digital UAO
Autor
Moreno Quintero, Renata
Córdoba, Diana
Acevedo Marín, Rosa Elizabeth
Institución
Resumen
Maps produced during the saga of European ‘discovery’ were
shown to erase local forms of spatial knowledge of colonised
populations to serve domination interests. This paper explores the
continuation of this colonial erasing logic in local planning practices
in Jamundí, a municipality where Black peasants’ traditional farms
persist in a sugarcane dominated landscape. We first compare
official maps from the current Land Use Plan of Jamundí with social
cartography produced by afro-descendant community councils to
analyse the maps’ selections, omissions and additions. Through
community map drawings and collective discussions during carto graphy workshops, interviews and tours of the territory, we then
reconstruct a Black geography that is concealed in official maps.
Our analysis shows that official maps naturalise a scale in which
only plantations are formally represented, rendering invisible small scale traditional agricultural systems and Black ecologies, favouring
the expansion of uses and activities detrimental to Black territorial
projects in Jamundí. We argue that afro-descendant living spaces
and experiences are visually omitted from spatial representation in
the physical planning maps through institutionalised processes. We
conclude that decolonising local planning is crucial for the recogni tion and securing of afro-descendant customary land and territorial
rights in Colombia as well as for regional sustainability.