This article examines the labour and political dimensions of non-salaried women workers in the extractive peripheries of Bolivia and Ecuador, to show how the appropriation of racialised and gendered work is a foundational aspect of the extractive logic of capital. We consider extraction in its broadest sense as the dispossession not only of resources but also of informal and reproductive work, and examine the ways in which the territorialised commons produced by, and necessary for, the interdependent activities to sustain life also form the basis of political identification and organisation. Territories as the making of places are fundamental for the constitution of marginalised collective identities. In peripheral sites where extractive lo...
Conflicts over extractive industry have emerged as one of the most visible and potentially explosive...
This thesis explores the main challenges associated with the inclusion of indigenous peoples in pr...
From Mexico to Argentina, through Venezuela, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia and Brazil, this compilation pre...
This article examines the labour and political dimensions of non-salaried women workers in the extra...
This article explores the transformation of indigenous women's care work in the Ecuadorian Amazon, a...
Despite a wide-ranging literature on the ‘post-neoliberal’ shift in Bolivia post-2006, there has bee...
This article engages in a discussion about the ‘quieter registers of power’ along the resource front...
Latin America is in a political crisis, yet Bolivia is still widely recognized as a beacon of hope f...
Latin America is in a political crisis, yet Bolivia is still widely recognized as a beacon of hope f...
In the city of Cochabamba, Bolivia, mothers from the campo have become the engine of the Bolivian ec...
Exploring indigenous life projects in encounters with extractivism, the present open access volume d...
In this dissertation, I offer a materialist account of the relationship between nation, nature, and ...
This article develops the concept of “precarious bodies” to theorise the lived experience of labour ...
Recent scholarship conceptualizing primitive accumulation as an ongoing process in global capitalism...
This article challenges broadly applied beliefs about the gendered nature of informality and the mar...
Conflicts over extractive industry have emerged as one of the most visible and potentially explosive...
This thesis explores the main challenges associated with the inclusion of indigenous peoples in pr...
From Mexico to Argentina, through Venezuela, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia and Brazil, this compilation pre...
This article examines the labour and political dimensions of non-salaried women workers in the extra...
This article explores the transformation of indigenous women's care work in the Ecuadorian Amazon, a...
Despite a wide-ranging literature on the ‘post-neoliberal’ shift in Bolivia post-2006, there has bee...
This article engages in a discussion about the ‘quieter registers of power’ along the resource front...
Latin America is in a political crisis, yet Bolivia is still widely recognized as a beacon of hope f...
Latin America is in a political crisis, yet Bolivia is still widely recognized as a beacon of hope f...
In the city of Cochabamba, Bolivia, mothers from the campo have become the engine of the Bolivian ec...
Exploring indigenous life projects in encounters with extractivism, the present open access volume d...
In this dissertation, I offer a materialist account of the relationship between nation, nature, and ...
This article develops the concept of “precarious bodies” to theorise the lived experience of labour ...
Recent scholarship conceptualizing primitive accumulation as an ongoing process in global capitalism...
This article challenges broadly applied beliefs about the gendered nature of informality and the mar...
Conflicts over extractive industry have emerged as one of the most visible and potentially explosive...
This thesis explores the main challenges associated with the inclusion of indigenous peoples in pr...
From Mexico to Argentina, through Venezuela, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia and Brazil, this compilation pre...