Natural resource extraction, once promoted by international lenders and governing elites as a promising development strategy, is beginning to hit a wall. After decades of landscape gutting and community resistance, mine developers and their allies are facing new challenges. The outcomes of the anti-mining pushback have varied, as increasing payments, episodic repression, and international pressures have deflected some opposition. But operational space has been narrowing in the extractive sector, as evidenced by the growing adoption of mining bans, moratoria, suspensions, and standoffs. This book tells the story of how that happened. In Breaking Ground, Rose J. Spalding examines mining conflict in new extraction zones and reactivated territories--places where mining as destiny is a contested idea. Spalding's innovative approach to the mining story traces the construction of mine-friendly rules in up-and-coming mining zones, as late-comers gear up to compete with mining giants. Spalding also excavates the tale of mining containment in countries that have turned away from the extraction model. By challenging deterministic assumptions about the commodities consensus in Latin America, Breaking Ground expands the analysis of resource governance to include divergent trajectories, tracing movement not just toward but also away from extractivism. Spalding explores how people living in targeted communities frame their concerns about the impacts of mining and organize to protect local voice and the environment. Then she unpacks the emerging array of policy responses, including those that encompass national level mining rejection. Breaking Ground takes up a timeless set of questions about the interconnection between politics and the environment, now re-examined with a fresh set of eyes.
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Product Details
Weight: 590g
Dimensions: 226 x 157mm
Publication Date: 13 Jun 2023
Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc
Publication City/Country: United States
Language: English
ISBN13: 9780197643150
About Rose J. Spalding
Rose J. Spalding is Professor of Political Science at DePaul University where she specializes in the study of Latin American social movements and political economy. She is the author of Contesting Trade in Central America: Market Reform and Resistance; Capitalists and Revolution in Nicaragua: Opposition and Accommodation 1979-1993; and The Political Economy of Revolutionary Nicaragua. Spalding's research has been supported by grants from the Social Science Research Council American Council of Learned Societies Fulbright and the Kellogg Institute at Notre Dame University among others. She is a founding contributor to the Research Group MEGA (Mobilization Extractivism and Government Action) at Tulane University.