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Afterlives of Extraction: Alternatives and Sustainable Futures [Mīkstie vāki]

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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 354 pages, height x width: 235x155 mm, weight: 633 g
  • Sērija : International Development Policy 16
  • Izdošanas datums: 02-Nov-2023
  • Izdevniecība: Martinus Nijhoff
  • ISBN-10: 9004538852
  • ISBN-13: 9789004538856
  • Mīkstie vāki
  • Cena: 104,55 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 354 pages, height x width: 235x155 mm, weight: 633 g
  • Sērija : International Development Policy 16
  • Izdošanas datums: 02-Nov-2023
  • Izdevniecība: Martinus Nijhoff
  • ISBN-10: 9004538852
  • ISBN-13: 9789004538856
"The frontiers of extraction are expanding rapidly, driven by a growing demand for minerals and metals that is often motivated by sustainability considerations. Two volumes of International Development Policy are dedicated to the paradoxes and futures ofgreen extractivism, with analyses of experiences from five continents. In this, the second of the two volumes, the 22 authors, using different conceptual approaches and in different empirical contexts, demonstrate the alarming obduracy of the logic of extractivism, even - and perhaps especially - in the growing support for the so-called green transition. The authors highlight the complex and enduring legacies of resource extraction and the urgent need to move beyond extractive models of development towards alternative pathways that prioritise social justice, environmental sustainability, democratic governance and the well-being of both humans and non-humans. They also caution us against the assumption that anti-extraction is anti-extractivist, that post-extraction is post-extractivism, and they critically attune us to the systemic nature of extractivism in ways that both connect and transcend any particular site or scale. This volume accompanies IDP 15, The Lives of Extraction: Identities, Communities, and the Politics of Place"--

This volume offers new perspectives from five continents on the complex and enduring legacies of resource extraction, and demonstrates the alarming obduracy of the logic of extractivism, even - and perhaps especially - in the growing support for the so-called green transition.
Preface


List of Figures and Tables


Abbreviations


Notes on Contributors


1Introduction: Global Afterlives of Extraction

Filipe Calvćo, Asanda Benya and Matthew Archer



Part 1

Post-extractivism: Debates and Practices

2Expanding Extractivisms: Extractivisms as Modes of Extraction Sustaining
Imperial Modes of Living

Erik Post



3The Structures of Conquest: Debating Extractivism(s), Infrastructures and
Environmental Justice for Advancing Post-development Pathways

Alexander Dunlap



4Logics of Extraction and of the Valorisation of Culture: the Role of
Post-extraction Investment in the Creation of Inequality in China

Ryan Parsons



5Regulating Mine Rehabilitation and Closure on Indigenous Held Lands:
Insights from the Regulated Resource States of Australia and Canada

Emille Boulot and Ben Collins



Part 2

Resilience, Contestation and Resistance

6Aluminium in Suriname (18982020): an Industry Came and Went, But Its
Impacts on the Maroon Communities Remain

Simon Lobach



7Contesting Extraction: Challenges for Coalition Building between Agrarian
and Anti-mining Movements

Louisa Prause



8We Are Nature Defending Itself: the Forest of Dannenrod Occupation as an
Example of Contested Extractivism in the Global North

Dorothea Hamilton and Sina Trölenberg



9National Resources, Resistance, and the Afterlives of the New International
Economic Order in Bangladesh

Paul Robert Gilbert



Part 3

Green Extractivism and Its Discontents

10The Alterlives of Green Extractivism: Lithium Mining and Exhausted
Ecologies in the Atacama Desert

James J. A. Blair, Ramón M. Balcįzar, Javiera
Barandiarįn and Amanda Maxwell



11Green Masquerade: Neo-liberalism, Extractive Renewable Energy Transitions,
and the Good Anthropocene in South Africa

Michelle Pressend



12Electric Vehicle Paradise? Exploring the Value Chains of Green
Extractivism

Devyn Remme, Siddharth Sareen, Håvard Haarstad and
Kjetil Rommetveit



Index
Filipe Calvćo is an economic and environmental anthropologist. He is an associate professor at the Geneva Graduate Institute. His research examines the politics, ecologies and economies of mineral extraction, with a current focus on the nexus between digitalization, work and extractivism.





Matthew Archer studies corporate sustainability, sustainable finance and sustainable development through the lens of political ecology and environmental anthropology. He is currently a lecturer in sustainability in the Department of Environment and Geography at the University of York.





Asanda Benya is a labour sociologist based at the University of Cape Town. She works at the intersection of gender, class and race. She researches the extractives industries, gendered workplace subjectivities, and labour and feminist movements.