2023
DOI: 10.1111/geoj.12515
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Opposing powers at the helm and the immobilities of passenger‐ferry governance in Vieques, Puerto Rico

Abstract: Almost 20 years have passed since Viequenses succeeded in their struggle to kick out the US Navy from their island, yet residents have been left stranded facing issues of the dispossession of the island's most poor, alongside slow clean‐up efforts and deteriorating health outcomes. Drawing upon approaches from recent critical transportation geographies, this article uses a mobility justice framework to understand how the afterlives of over 60 years of direct militarised colonial violence continue to repeat thr… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Organisations such as Chemonics, a consulting firm, and the United States Agency for International Development also played a role in forcing policy changes that led to the fall of rice prices in Haiti, which induced economic and environmental disasters there that further benefited US rice enterprises. For Pimentel Rivera (2023), debt has been influenced by coloniality, and has led to immobility in terms of transportation both to and from Vieques in Puerto Rico, further marginalising that sub‐population.…”
Section: Colonialitymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Organisations such as Chemonics, a consulting firm, and the United States Agency for International Development also played a role in forcing policy changes that led to the fall of rice prices in Haiti, which induced economic and environmental disasters there that further benefited US rice enterprises. For Pimentel Rivera (2023), debt has been influenced by coloniality, and has led to immobility in terms of transportation both to and from Vieques in Puerto Rico, further marginalising that sub‐population.…”
Section: Colonialitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This continues to occur because, as Pellow (2018) argues, marginalised communities are often seen as expendable. Pimentel Rivera (2023), in the special issue, references land contamination in Vieques that was the result of ongoing US military action and where local elites consented to violent resource extraction. Environmental and demographic changes resulted in the island's main health clinic being closed, requiring residents to travel to mainland Puerto Rico to get medical attention.…”
Section: Colonialitymentioning
confidence: 99%
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