Groundwater Politics: Advanced Extractivism and Slow Resistance

Author:   Sally Babidge
Publisher:   Berghahn Books
ISBN:  

9781805398820


Pages:   278
Publication Date:   01 March 2025
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Groundwater Politics: Advanced Extractivism and Slow Resistance


Overview

The mining industry is an expanding socio-ecological and political problem worldwide, not least in Atacameño-Likanantay (Indigenous) territories in the hyper-arid Salar de Atacama, Chile. Groundwater Politics addresses the social, technical and political conditions it calls ‘advanced extractivism’ to reveal how groundwater extraction sustains both ecological damage and mining economies. It richly describes the area's copper and lithium industries as historically linked with Indigenous communities and their ecological and economic futures. Based on over a decade of ethnographic research, the book casts community strategies to control water and territory as 'slow resistance’, the structural and multifaceted practices that generate a material future amid potential resource exhaustion.

Full Product Details

Author:   Sally Babidge
Publisher:   Berghahn Books
Imprint:   Berghahn Books
ISBN:  

9781805398820


ISBN 10:   1805398822
Pages:   278
Publication Date:   01 March 2025
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations Preface Acknowledgements List of Abbreviations Introduction: Uncertainty and the Surface Chapter 1. Ecologies of Advanced Extractivism: A Material Politics of Relations Chapter 2. Tilopozo: Ecological History and Extractivist Enigma Chapter 3. The Labour and Logic of Good Water Chapter 4. Agreements, ‘Development Benefits’ and Their Moral Economies Chapter 5. Good Work and ‘Shared Benefits’ Chapter 6. Making Relations: Intentional Intimacies of Advanced Extractivsm Chapter 7. The Overburden of Participation Conclusion References Index

Reviews

“This book is timely and sophisticated. It is one of only a few social science or humanities studies of groundwaters and depletion, which is a pressing global problem.” • Casey Walsh, University of California, Santa Barbara “This book is ethnographically rich, develops a strong line of analysis that adds to the current work in the field, and addresses a well-recognized and important topic.” • Josiah Heyman, University of Texas, El Paso


“This book is timely and sophisticated. It is one of only a few social science or humanities studies of groundwaters and depletion, which is a pressing global problem.” • Ciaran Walsh, University of California, Santa Barbara “This book is ethnographically rich, develops a strong line of analysis that adds to the current work in the field, and addresses a well-recognized and important topic.” • Josiah Heyman, University of Texas, El Paso


Author Information

Sally Babidge is an Associate Professor of anthropology at the University of Queensland, Australia. Some of her publications include Aboriginal Family and the State: The Conditions of History Ashgate 2010), and with P. Dallachy and V. Alberts, Written True, not Gammon! Histories of Aboriginal Charters Towers (Black Ink 2007).

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NOV RG 20252

 

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