Geography
An Andean Avatar: Post-neoliberal and neoliberal strategies for securing the unobtainable
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Recent years have seen increasingly aggressive expansion of extractive industry in the Andean-Amazonian region. Reminiscent of the film Avatar, this expansion drives conflicts over land, territory and political control of space. This expansion is occurring in both overtly neoliberal regimes and in self-consciously postneoliberal ones. This essay documents the convergence among the different regimes' ways of governing extraction and socio-environmental conflicts. We draw on Executive level statements and policy positions as well as on statements by indigenous peoples' organisations. Among the reasons for this apparent convergence are: long-standing resource curse effects; the need to generate resources to finance social policy instruments that are integral to the governments' overall political strategies; power and information asymmetries among companies and governments; and international relations. The convergences among Bolivia, Ecuador and Peru regarding the governance of extraction and the conflicts that it catalyses suggests the need for great critical caution before using the terminology of post-neoliberalism. © 2011 Taylor & Francis.
Publication Title
New Political Economy
Publication Date
2011
Volume
16
Issue
1
First Page
131
Last Page
145
ISSN
1356-3467
DOI
10.1080/13563461003789803
Keywords
Amazon, Evo morales, extractive industry, indigenous peoples, mining, natural gas, oil, postneoliberalism
Repository Citation
Bebbington, Anthony and Denise, Humphreys Bebbington, "An Andean Avatar: Post-neoliberal and neoliberal strategies for securing the unobtainable" (2011). Geography. 486.
https://commons.clarku.edu/faculty_geography/486