Autarkic ideology and economic policies were central features of the interwar period in Europe. Despite autarky’s connection to geographical concepts such as space, resources and population, its historical impact has been relatively little explored in the literature. In this article, we first present how the concept of ‘autarky’ conflates two etymological meanings: self-sufficiency and authoritarianism. We then explore this duality, using archival sources, by examining the social and economic policies applied to the fishing sector in Francoist Spain between 1939 and 1951. On the one hand, we examine the repression and transformation of the fishers’ social world. On the other, we study the impact of public policies on the marine fishing fleet, underlining the importance of the militaristic guidelines that shaped the reforms. We argue that these autarkic reforms have had long-term consequences that are still visible today. They represented a rupture for the associative environment of fishers and shaped the future characteristics of the fleet, as well as its pattern of geographical expansion.

autorship

Santiago Gorostiza | Miquel Ortega

date

2016

publication

Journal of Historical Geography

bibliographic reference

Gorostiza, S., Ortega, M. (2016) ‘The unclaimed latifundium’: the configuration of the Spanish fishing sector under Francoist autarky, 1939–1951. Journal of Historical Geography, Volume 52: 26–35.