Global Capital and Amphibian Extinctions
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Ryan Gunderson, William Charles, Claiton Fyock

Global Capital and Amphibian Extinctions

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Introduction

Global capital and amphibian extinctions. Sri Lanka's amphibian extinctions are linked to global capital, colonialism, and deforestation. This political-economic analysis reveals how unequal exchange and core-periphery relations drive biodiversity loss.

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Abstract

Sri Lanka has the highest number of recorded amphibian extinctions and most of the island’s remaining amphibian species are threatened with extinction. From a critical political-economic perspective that integrates previously disconnected lines of analysis in herpetological conservation, development, land use change, and colonial and neocolonial histories, we argue that these extinctions and extinction risks should not be understood as a localized event, but, instead, in relation to global networks that emerged from the international development of capitalism. Mass deforestation of the Southern Highlands, the region of Sri Lanka with the highest diversity of endemic and endangered amphibians, began following the commodification of land to establish plantations under British colonial rule. The core-periphery power relations installed during colonization remain in the neocolonial period, undergirding the forces driving deforestation to this day. Higher-income countries and multinational corporations have financially benefited from Sri Lanka’s “development” at the expense of many Sri Lankans and the island’s diverse amphibian populations and their habitats, a relationship consistent with the theory of ecologically unequal exchange.



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