This article analyzes Southeast Asian local communities’ resistance against the globalizing large-scale exploitation of natural resources using a micropolitical ecology approach. It focuses on how communities struggle for livelihoods, both resisting and appropriating globalized practices and narratives. Our ethnographic material encompasses natural resource conflicts in two communities: one on Sumatra (Indonesia) and one on Palawan (the Philippines). In both communities foreign and national companies have laid claims on community lands, transforming local power relations and wealth distribution as well as the relations of the communities vis-à-vis globalized production and the state. Communities often split over such transformations; some m...
Our paper draws on research in two sites where large goldmining projects are located – Misima and Li...
In recent years, efforts to institutionalise resource security cooperation in the Asia-Pacific regio...
Economic, social and natural environmental systems are interdependent, and economic systems cannot b...
This article analyzes Southeast Asian local communities’ resistance against the globalizing large-sc...
Researchers have long recognized practices of mutual aid, reciprocity and sharing as prevalent featu...
Southeast Asia has witnessed dramatic transformations in the rural sector over the past 60 years, fi...
Borderland zones in Southeast Asia have become sites of increased economic investment for developing...
ABSTRACT. In recent years, international nongovernment organizations (NGOs) and transnational networ...
There are more than 3000 ongoing conflicts involving the extractive industries (mining, gas, and oil...
Colonialism in Southeast Asia was marked by the response of local communities, especially farmers, i...
This paper addresses two main questions: First, to what extent is the current international literatu...
There are more than 3000 ongoing conflicts involving the extractive industries (mining, gas, and oil...
This article maps the rise of the water-energy-food 'nexus' as a research, policy and project agenda...
"The Merauke Integrated Food and Energy Estate (MIFEE), launched in 2010 by the Indonesian governmen...
Our paper draws on research in two sites where large goldmining projects are located - Misima and Li...
Our paper draws on research in two sites where large goldmining projects are located – Misima and Li...
In recent years, efforts to institutionalise resource security cooperation in the Asia-Pacific regio...
Economic, social and natural environmental systems are interdependent, and economic systems cannot b...
This article analyzes Southeast Asian local communities’ resistance against the globalizing large-sc...
Researchers have long recognized practices of mutual aid, reciprocity and sharing as prevalent featu...
Southeast Asia has witnessed dramatic transformations in the rural sector over the past 60 years, fi...
Borderland zones in Southeast Asia have become sites of increased economic investment for developing...
ABSTRACT. In recent years, international nongovernment organizations (NGOs) and transnational networ...
There are more than 3000 ongoing conflicts involving the extractive industries (mining, gas, and oil...
Colonialism in Southeast Asia was marked by the response of local communities, especially farmers, i...
This paper addresses two main questions: First, to what extent is the current international literatu...
There are more than 3000 ongoing conflicts involving the extractive industries (mining, gas, and oil...
This article maps the rise of the water-energy-food 'nexus' as a research, policy and project agenda...
"The Merauke Integrated Food and Energy Estate (MIFEE), launched in 2010 by the Indonesian governmen...
Our paper draws on research in two sites where large goldmining projects are located - Misima and Li...
Our paper draws on research in two sites where large goldmining projects are located – Misima and Li...
In recent years, efforts to institutionalise resource security cooperation in the Asia-Pacific regio...
Economic, social and natural environmental systems are interdependent, and economic systems cannot b...