Recent years have seen increasingly aggressive expansion of extractive industry in the Andean-Amazonian region. Reminiscent of the film Avatar, this expansion drives conflicts over land, territory and political control of space. This expansion is occurring in both overtly neoliberal regimes and in self-consciously postneoliberal ones. This essay documents the convergence among the different regimes\u27 ways of governing extraction and socio-environmental conflicts. We draw on Executive level statements and policy positions as well as on statements by indigenous peoples\u27 organisations. Among the reasons for this apparent convergence are: long-standing resource curse effects; the need to generate resources to finance social policy instrume...
The ‘new’ extractivism is a ‘new’ scramble in resource rich regions that refers to the rise in expor...
The election of Evo Morales as the first indigenous President of Bolivia in 2005 is widely credited...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 57-63)Over the past twenty years, mining conflicts in Peru h...
Recent years have seen increasingly aggressive expansion of extractive industry in the Andean-Amazon...
ExtractToo often it is assumed that all impact from mining, upon the environment and society, is inh...
Capital investment in natural resource extraction has fuelled an unprecedented rush to secure hydroc...
For lowland indigenous peoples in Bolivia, neoliberalism brought both threats and opportunities. On ...
The past decade has witnessed profound transformations in subnational territories engendered by a dr...
In Bolivia, new waves of mineral and hydrocarbon extraction have set off social conflicts and become...
The past decade has witnessed profound transformations in subnational territories engendered by a dr...
Over the last decades, many progressive Latin American regimes have repoliticized natural resource e...
In June of 2009, indigenous protest over the Peruvian government\u27s natural resource policies erup...
Drawing from qualitative research in the Ecuadorian Amazon, in this paper, we argue that Waorani ind...
© 2018 Dr Denisse Elizabeth Rodriguez QuinonezThe Ecuadorian government has defined extractivism as ...
This chapter studies the underlying tensions between ‘extractivism’ decentralisation processes, the ...
The ‘new’ extractivism is a ‘new’ scramble in resource rich regions that refers to the rise in expor...
The election of Evo Morales as the first indigenous President of Bolivia in 2005 is widely credited...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 57-63)Over the past twenty years, mining conflicts in Peru h...
Recent years have seen increasingly aggressive expansion of extractive industry in the Andean-Amazon...
ExtractToo often it is assumed that all impact from mining, upon the environment and society, is inh...
Capital investment in natural resource extraction has fuelled an unprecedented rush to secure hydroc...
For lowland indigenous peoples in Bolivia, neoliberalism brought both threats and opportunities. On ...
The past decade has witnessed profound transformations in subnational territories engendered by a dr...
In Bolivia, new waves of mineral and hydrocarbon extraction have set off social conflicts and become...
The past decade has witnessed profound transformations in subnational territories engendered by a dr...
Over the last decades, many progressive Latin American regimes have repoliticized natural resource e...
In June of 2009, indigenous protest over the Peruvian government\u27s natural resource policies erup...
Drawing from qualitative research in the Ecuadorian Amazon, in this paper, we argue that Waorani ind...
© 2018 Dr Denisse Elizabeth Rodriguez QuinonezThe Ecuadorian government has defined extractivism as ...
This chapter studies the underlying tensions between ‘extractivism’ decentralisation processes, the ...
The ‘new’ extractivism is a ‘new’ scramble in resource rich regions that refers to the rise in expor...
The election of Evo Morales as the first indigenous President of Bolivia in 2005 is widely credited...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 57-63)Over the past twenty years, mining conflicts in Peru h...