Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

Little good news is coming out of Haiti these days. There’s a deep social-environmental history that needs to be explored to understand why crises like poverty, AIDS, mudslides, and this week’s earthquake have been so devastating to the Haitian people.
I have written a bit about this history for one of the book projects I’m working on. Below are a few excerpts, but before reading further, please consider helping with the humanitarian relief for earthquake victims:
When hurricane Jeanne swept across the Caribbean, flooding rains killed over 3,000 people in the small nation of Haiti. Only 18 people died in the Dominican Republic on the same island. Haiti has one of the highest population densities in the Caribbean. Its 8.7 million inhabitants live on less than half the land occupied by 9.4 million Dominicans, so population density is roughly two times greater. Puerto Rico’s population density is as high as Haiti’s, but only seven people died in the storm.
Why, if Haiti’s population size is similar to the Dominican Republic’s and population density is the same as Puerto Rico’s, did Haiti suffer such a devastating loss of life? Some argue that the loss of forests, with their capacity to prevent soil erosion, was a main reason why so many people were killed: heavy rains let loose massive mudslides on deforested hillsides.1
Deforestation of Haiti’s landscape for agriculture and the manufacture of charcoal have left only 3% of the land surface forested.2 Charcoal, produced by cutting trees and slow burning them in mud pits, meets about 85% of energy needs as cooking fuel.3 We see a ravaged countryside today and are tempted to blame this on Haiti’s high population density. What is not as apparent, however, is how environmental degradation stems from a legacy of colonial resource extraction, slavery, corrupt governments, foreign intervention, and choices about energy, agriculture, and industry.
The mudslides and mortality did not occur in surrounding countries, which have less poverty and deforestation. In fact, forest area is actually increasing in countries like Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic where economic growth is rapid. Puerto Rico’s forest cover, for example, has risen from less than 10% to more than 40% in the last 60 years.1 These forests are recovering on abandoned farmland with the transition from agriculture to industry.
It is therefore too simplistic to blame Haiti’s high population density and consumption of forest resources for the current state of the environment. Human population growth drives environmental change but is seldom the sole factor behind environmental problems. Instead, we need to figure out how population changes go hand-in-hand with social, economic, and technological changes so that we can explain environmental impacts. Understanding and solving environmental challenges often requires simultaneous attention to demographic, economic, political, technological, and cultural values.
Haiti’s indigenous inhabitants practiced subsistence-based agriculture of corn, yams and cassava until their Columbus-era enslavement and genocide. Later, French colonists planted sugar cane in the well-suited warm, wet climate, and developed large, labor-intensive plantations. Throughout the 1700s, France imported thousands of African slaves to Haiti each year such that there were half a million working in 1789. During the colonial period, Haiti’s population was seven times larger than the Dominican Republic’s, which carried forward in time. Haiti exported tens of thousands of tons of sugar and most of the lumber from its forests back to France. The heavy exploitation of land for timber and sugar took a toll on the environment because of widespread land clearing, but it made Haiti one of the most profitable colonies in the Caribbean.
After Haitian independence in the early 19th century, the nascent government was unable to support its own people in developing cash crops for export. To re-establish trade and diplomatic relations with France, Haiti’s government was forced to pay reparations for land and slaves lost during the revolution. As much as 80% of Haiti’s budget went to pay these reparations, driving Haiti into significant debt from which it has not yet fully recovered.4
Today, Haiti is the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere, with the lowest combination of lifespan, education, and standard of living of any country outside Africa.5 Demographic, social, and economic changes happening elsewhere in the Caribbean are not happening as rapidly in Haiti. The abject poverty in which 80% of the population exists deteriorates the country’s environmental and political conditions and constrains economic development. People are forced to choose between life in urban slums and life as poor, small-scale, subsistence farmers. More than a million Haitians have emigrated to the United States and elsewhere since 1950.
In recent decades, many Haitian farmers have abandoned agriculture in search of greater profits from supplying charcoal to large urban and rural populations. With the collapse of agricultural and industrial exports, an unemployment rate of 33%, and sliding deeper into poverty, Haitians are forced to destroy remaining forests for charcoal fuel production. Consumption of natural resources just to stay alive is contributing to degraded environmental conditions.
Fertility remains high in Haiti because of high rates of mortality. Maternal, infant, and child mortality rates are high: Sixty-eight infants and 52 mothers die for every 1,000 live births each year, and the under-five child mortality rate is 123 children per 1,000. Haiti also suffers from the highest incidence of HIV/AIDS in the Western Hemisphere (5.6% of the population). The leading causes of death are diarrhea, respiratory infections, malaria, tuberculosis, and HIV/AIDS—diseases that are preventable or treatable in more developed countries. However, 40% of Haitians have no access to health care.6 Haiti’s unstable governance, poverty, and environmental degradation exacerbate this need for large families as a social safety net.7 This is why simple approaches of reducing fertility, such as government support for contraception, have largely failed in Haiti.
Thus, Haiti’s changes in population and economic welfare, from its subsistence-based land use pattern, to an exploitative resource-extraction system, to a poor society where wealth, industry, and commercial agriculture have pulled out of the country, are not characteristic of the economic pattern—in which increasing economic development begets increased welfare—experienced by much of the developed world over past centuries.
Haiti is battling not only mudslides and earthquakes, but a colonial legacy that has predisposed its people to one devastating crisis after another.
References and Further Reading:
1Aide, T.M. and H.R. Grau (2004) Globalization, migration, and Latin American ecosystems. Science 305:1915-1916.
2Kaiser, J. (2004) Wounding Earth’s fragile skin. Science 304:1616-1618.
3Collie, T. (2003) We know that this is destroying the land, but charcoal is what keeps us alive. South Florida Sun-Sentinel
4Hallward, P. (2004) Option Zero in Haiti. New Left Review 27:23-47
5Diamond, J. (2005) Collapse; How Societies Choose to fail or Succeed. Penguin.
6Farmer, P. (2004) Political violence and public health in Haiti. New England Journal of Medicine 350:1483-1486.
7de Sherbinin, A. (1996) Human Security and Fertility: The Case of Haiti. Journal of Environment and Development 5(1):28-45.
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Photo credit: http://www.flickr.com/photos/kretyen/ / CC BY 2.0
Tags: Haiti
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