"All at Sea: Surveying the watery expanses of the world economy "
From The Baffler:
Sinews of War and Trade: Shipping and Capitalism in the Arabian Peninsula by Laleh Khalili. Verso Books, 352 pages.
The International Labor Organization
estimates that in spring 2020, the coronavirus drove a 14 percent
decline in worldwide working hours relative to spring 2019, equivalent
to some 400 million lost jobs. Yet as economists rushed to measure these
staggering unemployment numbers, an inverse calamity unfolded out of
view: a rash of workers forced to labor against their will. The
International Transport Workers’ Federation claims that, in the midst of
the pandemic, the shipping industry coerced at least 200,000 merchant
seamen into contract extensions, denied them safe passage home to their
families, or required them to forego medical care in port. Still
ongoing, this de facto mass conscription resembles a large-scale
restoration of the historic press gangs seen during the worst seasons of
labor recruitment by the British Royal Navy, and later by the crimps
and landsharks of San Francisco’s so-called Barbary Coast. As customs
enforcement agencies tightened borders and shipping concerns endeavored
to ward off a dreaded cycle of “deglobalization” this spring, each
revealed a characteristic indifference to the marine workers who stoke
the dynamo of world commerce.
If this neglect feels like an old story, that is because the seagoing
edges of capital and colonialism, often sailing in cahoots, entail five
hundred years of contempt for marine workers. We can trace these
exploitative labor histories back to the sixteenth century, when chattel
slavery, facilitated by marine transport, laid the groundwork for the
expansion of European empires. Closer to our era, in the nineteenth
century, the Egyptian public works department used “Corvée”—that is,
unfree—labor to build the Suez Canal. In the early twentieth century, as
soon as organized labor made gains for sailors, the flag of convenience
began to fly: a legal instrument freed shipowners to open registries in
Liberia or Panama, allowing them to circumvent national labor laws
protecting seamen. Since the 1960s, the relentless marches of automation
and containerization—the use of those now-ubiquitous boxes that
streamline movement of goods from ship to shore—have again undermined
dockworkers who had only just managed to decasualize.
In recent decades, as remote, securitized transshipment facilities
like Dubai’s Jabal Ali have overtaken older, “break bulk” urban
seaports—where goods flowed right out of the holds and off the docks
into the metropolis—public scrutiny on maritime commerce has only
diminished. Now out of view, container and tanker ports continue to be
what Allan Sekula once dubbed globalization’s “forgotten space.” The
political theorist Laleh Khalili credits this imperviousness partly to
the sailor’s own fall from grace as a raconteur, hampered by the age of
the container ship. “If there are no yarns to be spun,” she writes in
her new book Sinews of War and Trade: Shipping and Capitalism in the Arabian Peninsula, “There is also scant possibility of telling stories over the deafening sound of the electric grinders or power hoses.”
Sinews offers one of the most outstanding recent investigations
into the hard-to-narrate infrastructure of modern ports and their place
in the patterns of global conflict and commerce. Much of her book
concerns the post-World War II development of tanker, bulk, and
container shipping along the coastlines of the Arab Peninsula, and the
fantasy futures authored by the speculators, emirates, empires, and
mercenary logistics companies that profited from it. Khalili’s deft and
forensic investigation brings into focus how the region was shaped and
in turn shaped the global energy economy in the age of oil. Moreover,
she draws a bright line between regional military and trade networks,
revealing the human cost of ordinary logistics. As she notes late in the
book, “Quartermasters of capital are so often indistinguishable from
the masters of trade.”....
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