Registration: The Politics of Precarity: Spaces of Extractivism, Violence, and Suffering
Registration for this event ended on March 15, 2022. A link to the Zoom space has been sent to all registered participants via the e-mail you used to register. If you feel you registered and did not receive the link, please check your other folders (i.e. junk) and if you still cannot find it, please e-mail us at exalt@helsinki.fi
Thank you!
Date and Time: March 17, 2022, from 16-17 UTC+2
Location: Zoom
Speakers:
- Author - Gediminas Lesutis, Marie Curie Fellow in Geography, University of Amsterdam
- Discussant - Jennifer Fluri, Professor of Human Geography, University of Colorado
- Discussant - Saska Petrova, Senior Lecturer in Human Geography, University of Manchester
This book launch presents the recently published Routledge book, The Politics of Precarity: Spaces of Extractivism, Violence, and Suffering by Gediminas Lesutis. This book explores how intensifying geographies of extractive capitalism shape vulnerable lives and (im)possibilities of transformative politics in historically marginalised areas of the global economy.
Engaging critical theory on space, precarity, and resistance with ethnographic research on destructive real-life impacts of dispossession in the epicentre of the extractive boom in contemporary Mozambique, The Politics of Precarity theorises precarity as a configuration of space, violence, and politics. Going beyond labour relations, or governance of life in liberal democracies, that are typically explored in literatures on precarity, the book shows how people dispossessed by natural resource extraction are subjected to structural, symbolic, and direct modalities of violence; this, Lesutis argues, simultaneously constitutes their suffering and ceaseless desire, however implausible, to be included into abstract space of extractivism as the sole pathway to a “better life”.
Reflecting on these dynamics of everyday life in the epicentre of extractivism, The Politics of Precarity urges the reader to think critically about how, despite the multifarious violence that it engenders, extractive capital accumulation is sustained even in the margins, historically excluded from contingently lived imaginaries of a "good life" or “development” promised by capitalism.
Two discussants – Jennifer Fluri and Saska Petrova – will reflect on the book’s contributions to understanding the complex politics of violence and precarity endemic to extractivism and contemporary capitalist development, as well as possibilities of politicization. After interventions from each of these scholars and an exchange with the author, the floor will then open for a facilitated Q&A session with the audience.
Please do not hesitate to contact the Global Extractivisms and Alternatives Initiative (EXALT) if you have any questions or need additional information (exalt@helsinki.fi). Thank you and we look forward to seeing you in March.
Zoom links will be sent to all registered participants by March 16, 2022. You will not get an immediate seperate confirmation, but we promise if you send the form we have recieved your registration. If you have any questions, please feel welcome to contact us via e-mail at exalt@helsinki.fi