Unsettling extractivism: indigeneity, race, and disruptive emplacements

Winchell, M.ORCID logo & Howe, C. (2024). Unsettling extractivism: indigeneity, race, and disruptive emplacements. Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology, 29(3), 201 - 207. https://doi.org/10.1111/jlca.12734
Copy

Drawing inspiration from new work across the fields of political ecology, plantation and abolition studies, critical Indigenous studies, and racial capitalism, this Introduction to a special issue of The Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology locates extraction within an account of property as a system of racialized exploitation. Aware of the risks of a cosmopolitics that romanticizes non-Western value systems as largely untouched by extractivism, in this Introduction and in the articles themselves, we center the question of how Indigenous communities and others navigate extractivism in places and landscapes that have been deeply impacted and partly transformed by resource mining, agrarian monoculture, and deforestation. In voicing demands not subordinated by a materialist and secular language of resource exploitation, these accounts invite a less deterministic account of “our” late capitalist present. We contend that just as extraction is not monolithic, neither are its refusals, resistances, and alternatives.

mail Request Copy

subject
Accepted Version
lock_clock
Restricted to Repository staff only until 20 August 2026

Request Copy

Export as

EndNote BibTeX Reference Manager Refer Atom Dublin Core JSON Multiline CSV
Export