We're now accepting proposals for the second round of our
Post/Extractivisms working group. Deadline July 22


*Extractivism and Uneasy Times: Sacrifices, Recoveries, and Resistances *

*Call for Papers*

*Post/Extractivisms 2022-23 *

*A Canadian Association of Latin American and Caribbean Studies Working
Group*



Our Call for Participation for the 2022-2023 Post/Extractivism Working
Group takes place in the context of (among other things) the persistence of
the Covid-19 pandemic, rising geopolitical tensions, overlapping and
compounding climate crises, and all of the ecological and human
inequalities these have exposed and amplified. All of these processes
intensify pressures to increase the extraction of natural resource, as
communities across the globe seek ways to restart their economies and
livelihoods, secure supply chains, and access the resources necessary for
decarbonization and energy transitions. Despite mounting awareness of the
consequences of extraction as a process and extractivism as an ideology of
development on human health, ecological dynamics across space and time,
pressures on the planet continue to grow.



After a very successful inaugural series focused on extraction in the
Americas, the post/extractivisms working group is excited to announce our
second series for 2022-2023 with an expanded, global, scope. Our aim is to
gather early career and established scholars, activists, and others working
in and around the evolving role of resource extraction in the preset
conjuncture and its historical antecedents. We will hold meetings virtually
once per month to discuss pre-circulated draft papers, book chapters, and
excerpts of manuscripts – one paper per meeting. The working group may grow
into something else – edited works, conference panels, co-authored
interventions, or other less conventional collective endeavors. Our primary
goal is to create a community to discuss papers in progress, and to
collectively read, think, and learn together.



Topics may include but are not limited to:



Extraction’s Spatial and Temporal Expressions

Mobilization against extraction

Accountability and transparency in extractive industries

Transition minerals

Development (and critiques of development)

Energy and energy transitions

Agribusiness

Decolonization

‘Neo’ or Progressive Extractivism

Environmental racism

Gendered Dimensions of Extractivism

Literatures of extraction

Geopolitics/Energopolitics

Extractivism as ideology

Capitalism, Extraction, and labour

Artisanal and industrial mining

Ethnographies



*Initial timeline: *



*July 22: Deadline for Paper Proposals*

*August 1: Circulation of Invitations for Selected Papers*

*August 23: Hybrid Kick-off Meeting, Announcement of Schedule for
Presentations (in conjunction with the 2022 Canadian Association of Latin
American and Caribbean Studies Annual Meeting)*

*September 2022-August 2023: Workshop Meetings (specific dates and times
tbd)*



*Please submit a title and abstract to: **[email protected]
<[email protected]>** by July 22. *



About the conveners:

Daniel Tubb is an Associate Professor of Anthropology at the University of
New Brunswick and author of *Shifting Livelihoods: Gold Mining and
Subsistence in the Chocó, Colombia*. Daniel has ongoing research on oil
palm plantations, agrarian change, and the impacts of war on nature in
Colombia, and on the impacts of resource projects in their early phase in
Canada.



Donald Kingsbury is an Assistant Professor (teaching stream) in Political
Science and Latin American Studies at the University of Toronto. He is
co-author, most recently, of *Populist Moments and Extractivist States in
Venezuela and Ecuador: The People’s Oil?*. Don’s current research focuses
on the intersection of resource extraction and decarbonizing energy
transitions, with a focus on lithium mining in South America and Canada.



-- 
Donald V. Kingsbury, PhD.
Assistant Professor (Teaching Stream)
Department of Political Science and Latin American Studies
University of Toronto

Vice President, Canadian Association of Latin American and Caribbean Studies

Recent:

Kingsbury, Donald (2022) "Energy Transitions in the Shadow of a Dictator:
Decarbonizing Neoliberalism and Lithium Extractivism in Chile" *The
Anthropocene Review* preprint:
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/20530196221087790

Kingsbury, Donald (2022) "Lithium's Buzz: Extractivism between Booms in
Bolivia, Argentina, and Chile" *Cultural Studies  *preprint:
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/09502386.2022.2034909?scroll=top&needAccess=true

Kramarz, Teresa and Donald Kingsbury (2021) *Populist Moments and
Extractivist States in Venezuela and Ecuador: The People's Oil?  *
(Palgrave). https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-030-70963-1#about

Kingsbury, Donald (2021) "Extractivism and (or after) the Left." *Latin
American Research Review *56(4): 977-987.
https://larrlasa.org/article/10.25222/larr.1668/

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