In the Australian coal mining region of the Hunter Valley, a political contest is taking shape around the mine final voids, the large holes that are left in the ground after mining has finished. This article describes an effort led by the coal lobby to fill the voids with imaginative and hopeful futures, described as a process of techno-speculative deferral. In contrast, local environmentalists (Indigenous and non-Indigenous) are drawing on dispossession and ongoing extractivism to craft an affective politics of loss around these spaces. The article considers the particular issues around the mine final voids as metonyms of the Anthropocene in order to caution against approaches which celebrate the hopefulness of ruins. Instead, the void's n...
The mining industry is today the largest contributor to Australia’s commodity-based export economy. ...
Coal, for decades one of the “certainties” of Australian politics, is in terminal decline. This econ...
What is an affective atmosphere of absence? How can the sense of loss be felt in place? The Pike Riv...
In the context of a groundswell of interest in developing innovative post-mining landscapes, this pa...
Water is a resource that both unites and divides people in the Upper Hunter Valley of New South Wale...
For almost three decades, open cut coal mines have been expanding deeper into the densely settled ag...
Water is a resource that both unites and divides people in the Upper Hunter Valley of New South Wale...
This article questions the sustainability of open-cut coal mining in the Hunter Valley region of Aus...
In 2010, a proposal to build the ‘Carmichael Coal Mine and Rail Project’ in the Galilee Basin in Que...
The Latrobe Valley, Australia, is a resource community in transition. The post-carbon future has yet...
This article provides a case study analysis of the social, economic and ecological impacts of open-c...
AbstractDespite mounting urgency to mitigate climate change, new coal mines have recently been appro...
The Great Artesian Basin (GAB) in Australia is one of the largest subterranean aquifer systems in th...
The Great Artesian Basin (GAB) in Australia is one of the largest subterranean aquifer systems in th...
The Hunter Valley, in New South Wales, Australia, is a globally significant coal mining and exportin...
The mining industry is today the largest contributor to Australia’s commodity-based export economy. ...
Coal, for decades one of the “certainties” of Australian politics, is in terminal decline. This econ...
What is an affective atmosphere of absence? How can the sense of loss be felt in place? The Pike Riv...
In the context of a groundswell of interest in developing innovative post-mining landscapes, this pa...
Water is a resource that both unites and divides people in the Upper Hunter Valley of New South Wale...
For almost three decades, open cut coal mines have been expanding deeper into the densely settled ag...
Water is a resource that both unites and divides people in the Upper Hunter Valley of New South Wale...
This article questions the sustainability of open-cut coal mining in the Hunter Valley region of Aus...
In 2010, a proposal to build the ‘Carmichael Coal Mine and Rail Project’ in the Galilee Basin in Que...
The Latrobe Valley, Australia, is a resource community in transition. The post-carbon future has yet...
This article provides a case study analysis of the social, economic and ecological impacts of open-c...
AbstractDespite mounting urgency to mitigate climate change, new coal mines have recently been appro...
The Great Artesian Basin (GAB) in Australia is one of the largest subterranean aquifer systems in th...
The Great Artesian Basin (GAB) in Australia is one of the largest subterranean aquifer systems in th...
The Hunter Valley, in New South Wales, Australia, is a globally significant coal mining and exportin...
The mining industry is today the largest contributor to Australia’s commodity-based export economy. ...
Coal, for decades one of the “certainties” of Australian politics, is in terminal decline. This econ...
What is an affective atmosphere of absence? How can the sense of loss be felt in place? The Pike Riv...