Embodying the Cost of a Predatory State: Depletion via Social Reproduction in Venezuela’s Crisis (2013–2021)

Llavaneras Blanco, M and Antulio Rosales (2025) "Embodying the Cost of a Predatory State: Depletion via Social Reproduction in Venezuela's Crisis (2013–2021)", Social Politics: International Studies in Gender, State & Society; jxaf053, https://academic.oup.com/sp/advance-article/doi/10.1093/sp/jxaf053/8361731

This article brings together the literatures of predation and depletion via social reproduction (DSR) to provide an explanation of the Venezuelan crisis (2013–2021). Venezuela’s gradual descent into a predatory state exacerbated the state’s reliance on the unpaid reproductive labor of women, which provoked gendered harms. We empirically examine DSR as exacerbated by predation that manifests in harms to citizenship entitlements, discursive harms, and bodily harms. The embodied consequences of the predatory state’s reliance on women’s labor manifest in the weakening of livelihoods, reproductive, labor, and political rights. The article proposes a framework to explain the embodied costs of the Venezuelan crisis, with the potential of explaining gendered aspects of the global authoritarian turn. The article broadens both the literature on the state capacity of predatory states by “embodying” it, and the literature on DSR by exploring forms of depletion that occur as a consequence of institutional decline and economic collapse.

OPEN ACCESS
https://doi.org/10.1093/sp/jxaf053

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

English
French
Arabic
Spanish
Increase Font Size
Decrease Font Size
Toggle High Contrast