Latin American Extractivism: Dependency, Resource Nationalism and Resistance in Broad Perspective
Rowman & Littlefield will be publishing my edited LATIN AMERICAN EXTRACTIVISM: DEPENDENCY, RESOURCE NATIONALISM AND RESISTANCE IN BROAD PERSPECTIVE by the end of the year. Here is a brief description of the book:
This book
explores different aspects of Latin America’s extractivist economies and argues
that on issues such as legislation and policies toward foreign capital and
small-scale mining, economic ties with China, environmental destruction and
indigenous rights, Latin American governments had different records. In doing
so, the book takes issue with a school of writers referred to as
“neo-extractivism,” who tend to minimize the importance of differences between
Pink Tide progressive governments, conservative ones and those on the right on
grounds that all of them have submitted themselves to the dictates of global
capital. Several chapters look at cultural patterns involving gender, ethnicity
and class that lay behind protests in opposition to extractivist projects as
well as the contrast in responses from state actors to those movements. The
book also compares the impact of strategies toward economic development as they
relate to extractivism and analyzes the role of the state in promoting economic
growth and its theoretical implications. In emphasizing resource nationalism,
the book attempts to refute a basic precept of neo-extractivism writers that a
“consensus” existed among Latin American governments on extractivism. The book
argues that there may have been a consensus regarding the beneficial nature of
extractivist industries, but not on how to maximize the revenue derived from
extractivism, and how to put it to good use.
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