Social Conflict, Economic Development and Extractive Industry

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Alli Ances
anti-mining movements
Category=GTP
Category=KNAT
Charac Ter
Col Lect Ive Action
Cred Ib Il Ity
environmental justice
Environmental Studies
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Humphreys Bebbington
hydrocarbon governance
Indi Gen Ous
Indi Gen Ous Groups
Indi Gen Ous People
indigenous rights Latin America
Latin America
Lower Urubamba
Lowland Indigenous Groups
Mining Mandate
Mobil Iza Tion
Mun Ity
Munit Ies
Nat Ural
Nat Ural Gas
Natural Resource Governance
Oil Frontier
Organ Iza
Plora Tion
Pol Itics
Polit Ical Eco Nom Ies
political ecology
Political Economy
Popu La Tion
resource extraction impacts
Rural Development
Rural Livelihoods
SANTA CRUZ
Sim Ilar
socio-environmental conflict transformation
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415710718
  • Weight: 520g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 08 Aug 2013
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The extraction of minerals, oil and gas has a long and ambiguous history in development processes – in North America, Europe, Latin America and Australasia. Extraction has yielded wealth, regional identities and in some cases capital for industrialization. In other cases its main heritages have been social conflict, environmental damage and underperforming national economies. As the extractive economy has entered another boom period over the last decade, not least in Latin America, the countries in which this boom is occurring are challenged to interpret this ambiguity. Will the extractive industry yield, for them, economic development, or will its main gifts be ones of conflict, degradation and unequal forms of growth.

This book speaks directly to this question and to the different ways in which Latin American countries are responding to the challenge of extractive industry. The contributors are a mixture of geographers, economists, political scientists, development experts and anthropologists, who all draw on sustained field work in the region. By digging deep into both national and local experiences with extractive industry they demonstrate the ways in which it transforms economies, societies, polities and environments. They pay particular attention to the social conflict that extraction consistently produces, and they ask how far this conflict might usher in political and institutional changes that could lead to a more productive relationship between extraction and development. They also ask whether the existence of left-of-centre governments in the region changes the relationships between extractive industry and development.

The book makes clear the immense difficulties that countries and regional societies face in harnessing extractive industry for the collective good. For the most part the findings question the wisdom of the development model that many countries in the region have taken up and which emphasises the productive roles of mining and hydrocarbon industries. The book should be of interest to students and researchers of Development Studies, Geography, Politics and Political Economy, as well as Anthropology.

Anthony Bebbington is Higgins Professor of Environment and Society and Director of the Graduate School of Geography at Clark University, USA. He is also a Professorial Research Fellow in the School of Environment and Development at the University of Manchester, UK, and Research Associate of the Centro Peruano de Estudios Sociales, Lima, Peru.