TY - BOOK TI - Indigenous life projects and extractivism: ethnographies from South America SN - 978-3-319-93434-1 PY - 2019/// CY - Cham, Switzerland PB - Palgrave Macmillan KW - Environmental policy KW - South America KW - sears KW - Indians of South America KW - Social conditions KW - Natural resources N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; Indigenous peoples, extractivism, and turbulences in South America / Juan Javier Rivera Andía and Cecilie Vindal Ødegaard -- Controlling abandoned oil installations : ruination and ownership in northern Peruvian Amazonia / María A. Guzmán Gallegos -- Extractive pluralities : the intersection of oil wealth and informal gold mining in Venezuelan Amazonia / Amy Penfield -- In the spirit of oil : unintended flows and leaky lives in northeastern Ecuador / Stine Krøijer -- Translating wealth in a globalised extractivist economy : contrabandistas and accumulation by diversion / Cecilie Vindal Ødegaard -- Water as resource and being : water extractivism and life projects in Peru / Astrid B. Stensrud -- The silent 'cosmopolitics' of artefacts : spectral extractivism, ownership and 'obedient' things in Cañaris (Peru) / Juan Javier Rivera Andía -- Carbon and biodiversity conservation as resource extraction : enacting REDD+ across cultures of ownership in Amazonia / Marc Brightman -- Stories of resistance : translating nature, indigeneity, and place in mining activism / Fabiana Li and Adriana Paola Paredes Peñafiel -- Performing indigeneity in Bolivia : the struggle over the TIPNIS / Nicole Fabricant and Nancy Postero N2 - Exploring indigenous life projects in encounters with extractivism, the present open access volume discusses how current turbulences actualise questions of indigeneity, difference and ontological dynamics in the Andes and Amazonia. While studies of extractivism in South America often focus on wider national and international politics, this contribution instead provides ethnographic explorations of indigenous politics, perspectives and worlds, revealing loss and suffering as well as creative strategies to mediate the extralocal. Seeking to avoid conceptual imperialism or the imposition of exogenous categories, the chapters are grounded in the respective authors' long-standing field research. The authors examine the reactions (from resistance to accommodation), consequences (from anticipation to rubble) and materials (from fossil fuel to water) diversely related to extractivism in rural and urban settings. How can Amerindian strategies to preserve localised communities in extractivist contexts contribute to ways of thinking otherwise? UR - https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Uqy46dXcfPHuoR_7vm14pHzch-JSh5Op/view?usp=sharing ER -