The tangled politics of conservation and resource extraction in Mozambique's green economy

This article explores how Mozambique's green economy has been produced through the intersection of global ideas about green development, regional economic development dynamics, and local debates and political pressures around extraction and conservation. Mozambique's green economy aims to...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kate Symons
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Arizona Libraries 2018-10-01
Series:Journal of Political Ecology
Online Access:https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/22762
id doaj-1d39982e2dbc4c10b9cb394d837696d1
record_format Article
spelling doaj-1d39982e2dbc4c10b9cb394d837696d12020-11-25T02:15:10ZengUniversity of Arizona LibrariesJournal of Political Ecology1073-04512018-10-0125148850710.2458/v25i1.2276222314The tangled politics of conservation and resource extraction in Mozambique's green economyKate Symons0University of EdinburghThis article explores how Mozambique's green economy has been produced through the intersection of global ideas about green development, regional economic development dynamics, and local debates and political pressures around extraction and conservation. Mozambique's green economy aims to compress many of its current challenges into a seemingly attractive and compelling agenda. The green economy discourse has produced a new relationship between the conservation and extractives sector, characterized by 'green' financing and offsetting measures intended to handle (at least on paper) the contradictions between extractives-led growth and sustainable development. However, the green economy vision has also provided specific actors with ways to contest extraction. The article provides a lens onto the production of green economy policies and institutions in Mozambique, the way the policy combines neoliberal and non-neoliberal political ideas, and how green economy ideas are played out in the situated politics of debates over conservation and extraction. I consider how 'the' green economy is reworked through tracing a particular case – the recent debates over whether a large coal port should be built in the Ponta do Ouro Marine Reserve. This foregrounds the multiple and often ambiguous uses of green economy discourses to pursue different, and sometimes contradictory agendas. The article contributes new empirical information on the roll-out of green economies in a developing country context, while also seeking to expand current political ecology literature on neoliberalism and green economies more generally. Key words: Mozambique, green economy, neoliberal nature, extractives, conservation, assemblagehttps://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/22762
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kate Symons
spellingShingle Kate Symons
The tangled politics of conservation and resource extraction in Mozambique's green economy
Journal of Political Ecology
author_facet Kate Symons
author_sort Kate Symons
title The tangled politics of conservation and resource extraction in Mozambique's green economy
title_short The tangled politics of conservation and resource extraction in Mozambique's green economy
title_full The tangled politics of conservation and resource extraction in Mozambique's green economy
title_fullStr The tangled politics of conservation and resource extraction in Mozambique's green economy
title_full_unstemmed The tangled politics of conservation and resource extraction in Mozambique's green economy
title_sort tangled politics of conservation and resource extraction in mozambique's green economy
publisher University of Arizona Libraries
series Journal of Political Ecology
issn 1073-0451
publishDate 2018-10-01
description This article explores how Mozambique's green economy has been produced through the intersection of global ideas about green development, regional economic development dynamics, and local debates and political pressures around extraction and conservation. Mozambique's green economy aims to compress many of its current challenges into a seemingly attractive and compelling agenda. The green economy discourse has produced a new relationship between the conservation and extractives sector, characterized by 'green' financing and offsetting measures intended to handle (at least on paper) the contradictions between extractives-led growth and sustainable development. However, the green economy vision has also provided specific actors with ways to contest extraction. The article provides a lens onto the production of green economy policies and institutions in Mozambique, the way the policy combines neoliberal and non-neoliberal political ideas, and how green economy ideas are played out in the situated politics of debates over conservation and extraction. I consider how 'the' green economy is reworked through tracing a particular case – the recent debates over whether a large coal port should be built in the Ponta do Ouro Marine Reserve. This foregrounds the multiple and often ambiguous uses of green economy discourses to pursue different, and sometimes contradictory agendas. The article contributes new empirical information on the roll-out of green economies in a developing country context, while also seeking to expand current political ecology literature on neoliberalism and green economies more generally. Key words: Mozambique, green economy, neoliberal nature, extractives, conservation, assemblage
url https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/22762
work_keys_str_mv AT katesymons thetangledpoliticsofconservationandresourceextractioninmozambiquesgreeneconomy
AT katesymons tangledpoliticsofconservationandresourceextractioninmozambiquesgreeneconomy
_version_ 1724897293746831360