The Early Socio-ecological Dimensions of Tricontinental (1967–1971): A Sovereign Social Metabolism for the Third World
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
SAGE Publications
Materia
Tricontinental OSPAAAL anti-imperialism
Date
2024-08-30Referencia bibliográfica
García Molinero, A. & Pedregal, A. 13(3), 368-400. [https://doi.org/10.1177/22779760241265565]
Sponsorship
Project number 357011, funded by the Research Council of FinlandAbstract
This article delves into the socio-ecological dimensions of OSPAAAL,
the Cuban Third World solidarity institution, focusing particularly on
the early years of its official organ: the magazine Tricontinental (1967–
1971). Tricontinental’s articles and graphic works, even if not always in
an explicit manner, addressed environmental concerns in a revolutionary
way, anticipating debates that would later unfold on international
institutional platforms. These concerns were primarily discussed in the
context of the Third World’s quest for autonomous production, closely
intertwined with the agrarian question and sovereign industrialization.
Key aspects such as land access, distribution, and resource management
were pivotal. The publication’s central emphasis on struggles for national
liberation, especially within the guerrilla arena, played a crucial role in
disseminating the anti-imperialist pursuit of a sovereign social metabolism
across the Third World. Combining Cuban, Latin Americanist, and internationalist accents, Tricontinental also condemned the ecological
impact of transnational corporations’ predatory resource extraction in
the Third World, while exploring alternative and cooperative models.
This article unveils the latent socio-environmental dimensions of its
critique, illustrating how ecological concerns subtly underpinned its
anti-imperialist and internationalist discourse.