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Our Extractive Age: Expressions of Violence and Resistance emphasizes how the spectrum of
violence associated with natural resource extraction permeates contemporary collective life.
Chronicling the increasing rates of brutal suppression of local environmental and labor activists
in rural and urban sites of extraction, this volume also foregrounds related violence in areas that we
might not expect, such as infrastructural developments, protected areas for nature conservation,
and even geoengineering in the name of carbon mitigation. Contributors argue that extractive
violence is not an accident or side effect, but rather a core logic of the 21st-century planetary
experience. Acknowledgment is made not only of the visible violence involved in the securitiza tion of extractive enclaves, but also of the symbolic and structural violence that the governance,
economics, and governmentality of extraction have produced. Extractive violence is shown not
only to be a spectacular event, but an extended dynamic that can be silent, invisible, and gradual.
The volume also recognizes that much of the new violence of extraction has become cloaked in
the discourse of “green development,” “green building,” and efforts to mitigate the planetary
environmental crisis through totalizing technologies. Ironically, green technologies and other
contemporary efforts to tackle environmental ills often themselves depend on the continuance of
social exploitation and the contaminating practices of non-renewable extraction. But as this
volume shows, resistance is also as multi-scalar and heterogeneous as the violence that it inspires.
The book is essential reading for activists and for students and scholars of environmental
politics, natural resource management, political ecology, sustainable development, and
globalization. |
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