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  • Tactics of dispossession: A...
    Frederiksen, Tomas; Himley, Matthew

    Transactions - Institute of British Geographers (1965), March 2020, 2020-03-00, 20200301, Volume: 45, Issue: 1
    Journal Article

    In this article we analyse and theorise how power is exercised and subjectivities reworked to achieve and maintain socio‐political order in areas of large‐scale international extractive investment. Through a critical review of recent literature on the political ecologies of the international mining and hydrocarbon industries, we explore the strategies that firms and their allies deploy to secure and preserve the transformed relations of land and resource access upon which accumulation relies. Inspired by the work of John Allen we analyse these strategies with attention to the modalities and techniques of power used, highlighting the diverse ways socio‐political stability is pursued despite the industry’s destabilising effects. What emerges is that, contrasting the sector’s reputation for coercion and domination, transformed regimes of access to land and resources at the extractive frontier are to a significant degree achieved and stabilised through what Allen calls the “quieter registers” of power. Attention to the varied and overlapping ways extractive firms and their allies exercise power to secure and maintain access to land and resources highlights limitations to David Harvey’s influential accumulation by dispossession framework for understanding how extractive capital circulates into “new ground.” It also directs attention to processes of subject formation at the extractive frontier, and to how industry expansion may be facilitated through the production of particular kinds of subjects. To illustrate this, we outline three interrelated ways subjectivities are reworked through peoples’ encounters with the logics, materiality, and power of contemporary extractive industry. We suggest that those living in the shadow of large international extractive operations become extractive subjects. This article reviews recent critical social science research on extractive industry to examine and theorise the relationship between land and resource access, techniques of power, and subject formation. Reviewing this literature reveals the range of strategies deployed to achieve the forms of asset redistribution on which extractive industry's development depends and to address the socio‐political tumult often generated. Attention to the varied ways extractive firms and their allies exercise power to secure and maintain access to land and resources highlights limitations to David Harvey's influential accumulation by dispossession framework and directs attention to how industry expansion is facilitated through the production of particular kinds of subjects.