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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Thea RiofrancosPublisher: Duke University Press Imprint: Duke University Press Weight: 0.386kg ISBN: 9781478008484ISBN 10: 1478008482 Pages: 277 Publication Date: 07 August 2020 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() 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 ContentsReviewsResource Radicals is an insightful and ultimately optimistic interpretation of social mobilization around natural resource extraction in Ecuador. Thea Riofrancos eschews simple resource curse theory, viewing mobilization as a potential pathway toward more productive modes of governing extractive industry. Sensitive to both anti-extractivist and 'Pink Tide' approaches to resource extraction, she offers a nuanced analysis of resource politics and the complex challenges facing regimes that seek to govern the subsoil for progressive change. -- Anthony Bebbington, coauthor of * Governing Extractive Industries: Politics, Histories, Ideas * Resource Radicals is an insightful and ultimately optimistic interpretation of social mobilization around natural resource extraction in Ecuador. Thea Riofrancos eschews simple resource curse theory, viewing mobilization as a potential pathway toward more productive modes of governing extractive industry. Sensitive to both anti-extractivist and 'Pink Tide' approaches to resource extraction, she offers a nuanced analysis of resource politics and the complex challenges facing regimes that seek to govern the subsoil for progressive change. -- Anthony Bebbington, coauthor of * Governing Extractive Industries: Politics, Histories, Ideas * Resource Radicals presents an insightful first-hand account of fierce political conflict over extractivism within the Ecuadorian Left during the era of Rafael Correa's governance.... The book's analysis...offers a timely contribution to critical scholarship. -- Sibo Chen * Resilience * [Resource Radicals] provide[s] important insights into Bolivia and Ecuador, and into fossil-fuel capitalism writ large. -- Kim Fortun & James Adams * Public Books * This is a valuable, sensitive, and generous study of the new shapes that left politics has taken in the twenty-first century as crises of ecology and inequality swirl together. It's an essential basis for understanding the challenges ahead. -- Jedediah Purdy, author of * This Land Is Our Land: The Struggle for a New Commonwealth * [Riofranco's] scholarship is an example of internationalist solidarity in critical practice, the kind to which we may all aspire, and to which our current moment demands. -- Hilary Goodfriend * Jacobin Magazine * A thoughtful analysis of the origins and ground-level dynamics of the divergence within the Ecuadorean left. -- Tony Wood * New Left Review * By examining how activists envisioned a post-petroleum future, Riofrancos transcends the superficial debates on the legacy of the Pink Tide and, in turn, helps chart a path forward for creating a society as equitable as it is ecological. -- Jared Olson * Los Angeles Review of Books * Resource Radicals presents an insightful first-hand account of fierce political conflict over extractivism within the Ecuadorian Left during the era of Rafael Correa's governance.... The book's analysis...offers a timely contribution to critical scholarship. -- Sibo Chen * LSE Review of Books * Through archival and ethnographic research, [Riofrancos] explores the conditions and consequences of the radical politicization of resource extraction in what she calls two leftisms.... She concludes with crucial reflections about the dilemmas of resource dependency for both the Left in power and the Left in resistance. -- Nicole Fabricant * NACLA Report on the Americas * A complex and nuanced understanding of the praxis of politics in Ecuador during this time-period.... A remarkable first-hand account of the internectine conflict within the left during the ten years that Rafael Correa was in power. -- Francis Adams * European Review of Latin American and Caribbean Studies * Author InformationThea Riofrancos is Associate Professor of Political Science at Providence College and coauthor of A Planet to Win: Why We Need a Green New Deal. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |