Title
Mining and Social Movements: Struggles Over Livelihood and Rural Territorial Development in the Andes
Date Issued
01 December 2008
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Abstract
Social movements have been viewed as vehicles through which the concerns of poor and marginalized groups are given greater visibility within civil society, lauded for being the means to achieve local empowerment and citizen activism, and seen as essential in holding the state to account and constituting a grassroots mechanism for promoting democracy. However, within development studies little attention has been paid to understanding how social movements can affect trajectories of development and rural livelihood in given spaces, and how these effects are related to movements' internal dynamics and their interaction with the broader environment within which they operate. This paper addresses this theme for the case of social movements protesting contemporary forms of mining investment in Latin America. On the basis of cases from Peru and Ecuador, the paper argues that the presence and nature of social movements has significant influences both on forms taken by extractive industries (in this case mining) and on the effects of this extraction on rural livelihoods. In this sense, one can usefully talk about rural development as being co-produced by movements, mining companies, and other actors, in particular the state. The terms of this co-production, however, vary greatly among different locations, reflecting the distinct geographies of social mobilization and of mineral investment, as well as the varying power relationships among the different actors involved. © 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Start page
2888
End page
2905
Volume
36
Issue
12
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Mineralogía
Minería, Procesamiento de minerales
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-55949130091
Source
World Development
ISSN of the container
0305750X
Sponsor(s)
We are grateful to the support of the International Development Research Centre and Rimisp-Latin American Centre for Rural Development, and to the comments over the course of this study as well as on this draft from Ricardo Abramovay, José Bengoa, Julio Berdegué, Manuel Chiriboga, Christian Paz, Mirtha Vasquez, Luis Vittor, and various anonymous reviewers of versions of this argument. Thanks also to the support given us by Grufides of Cajamarca, the Asamblea de Unidad Cantonal in Cotacachi, and the advisors and staff of Global Greengrants Fund. Anthony Bebbington is also grateful for an Economic and Social Research Council Professorial Fellowship (RES-051-27-0191) which supported his time while writing this paper.
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus