Gold conflict and contested conduct: Large- and small-scale mining subjectivities in Indonesia

被引:4
作者
Libassi, Matthew [1 ]
机构
[1] Rutgers State Univ, Ctr Cultural Anal, Piscataway, NJ 08854 USA
关键词
Extractive industries; Subject formation; Governmentality; Small-scale mining; Resource conflict; Indonesia; EXTRACTIVE INDUSTRIES; RESOURCE-MANAGEMENT; POLITICAL ECOLOGY; STATE; TERRITORIALIZATION; ENVIRONMENTALITY; MINERS; FOREST; LABOR; POWER;
D O I
10.1016/j.geoforum.2022.10.005
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学]; K9 [地理];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
Resource extraction shapes the people who live and work in its midst. In Pongkor, Indonesia, these transformations revolve around long -running tensions between large- and small-scale gold miners. The region is home to a state-owned industrial mine as well as thousands of unlicensed, small-scale miners. These actors have competed over the same gold deposits, and who has the authority to mine them, for more than three decades. In this article, I examine how this resource conflict informs multiple, co -constitutive extractive subjectivities in Pongkor. I expand upon existing analyses of resource governance, extractive development, and environmental conflict by examining the multi -directional, interrelated processes of subject formation entailed in asserting claims to resources. Drawing on ethnographic research, I frame the situation in Pongkor as a territorial conflict with three competing subject formation processes at its core. First, the mining company has attempted to end small-scale mining by reconstituting local people as more amenable development subjects. It emphasizes particular nationalistic, economic, and moral values through both disciplinary and community development programs. Second, small-scale miners have responded by cultivating political subjectivities grounded in a collective "community miner" identity. Community miners go beyond simply participating in gold -based livelihoods; they learn to argue for rights to local resources. Third, the mining company has pursued internal reforms aimed at remaking itself and its employees. Using small-scale miners as a foil, company leaders work to reposition their operations as a model of clean and green development. In tracing these processes, I complicate narratives of industrial extractive dominance and community resistance by demonstrating that subjects inside and outside of mining operations are co -constituted. I call for further research on the shaping of varied subject positions-including corporate mining employees, small-scale miners, and local residents-involved in extractive conflicts.
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页数:13
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