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About This Book
In Unearthing Conflict Fabiana Li analyzes the aggressive expansion and modernization of mining in Peru since the 1990s to tease out the dynamics of mining-based protests. Issues of water scarcity and pollution, the loss of farmland, and the degradation of sacred land are especially contentious. She traces the emergence of the conflicts by discussing the smelter-town of La Oroyaâwhere people have lived with toxic emissions for almost a centuryâbefore focusing her analysis on the relatively new Yanacocha gold mega-mine. Debates about what kinds of knowledge count as legitimate, Li argues, lie at the core of activist and corporate mining campaigns. Li pushes against the concept of "equivalence"âor methods with which to quantify and compare things such as pollutionâto explain how opposing groups interpret environmental regulations, assess a project's potential impacts, and negotiate monetary compensation for damages. This politics of equivalence is central to these mining controversies, and Li uncovers the mechanisms through which competing parties create knowledge, assign value, arrive at contrasting definitions of pollution, and construct the Peruvian mountains as spaces under constant negotiation.
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Table of contents
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: A Mining Country
- Part I. Mining Past and Present
- Part II. Water and Life
- Part III. Activism and Expertise
- Conclusion: Expanding Frontiers of Extraction
- Notes
- References
- Index