Divergent memories and visions of the future in conflicts over mining development

Conflicts over extractive development often center around predicting future profits and economic growth, and estimating industrial pollution. How these projections are understood and seen as legitimate and trustworthy depends on social actors' environmental imaginaries and timescapes. Thus, I e...

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Main Author: Erik Kojola
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Arizona Libraries 2020-11-01
Series:Journal of Political Ecology
Online Access:https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/23210
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spelling doaj-51a6f93c75554d4f986091e5ef0321702021-01-27T23:48:38ZengUniversity of Arizona LibrariesJournal of Political Ecology1073-04512020-11-0127189891610.2458/v27i1.2321022824Divergent memories and visions of the future in conflicts over mining developmentErik Kojola0Texas Christian UniversityConflicts over extractive development often center around predicting future profits and economic growth, and estimating industrial pollution. How these projections are understood and seen as legitimate and trustworthy depends on social actors' environmental imaginaries and timescapes. Thus, I examine the temporal and cultural dynamics of natural resource politics, particularly how affective connections to the past and future mobilize support and opposition to new mining. I use the case of proposed copper mines in the rural Minnesota Iron Range region to explore the different environmental imaginaries and timescapes that mining opponents and proponents use to understand the potential socio-environmental impacts, and to legitimate their positions. Proponents, including long-time and working class Iron Range residents and mining corporations, view the region as an industrial landscape built by mining and hope new proposals will renew the past to create a prosperous future. Meanwhile, environmental groups who oppose mining view the region through an environmental imaginary based on outdoor recreation, and draw on collective memories of family and youth trips to understand new extractive projects as a rupture to their vision of the future. I show that resource extraction is understood through temporalities that differ across intersections of class and region, and that emotional meanings of the past and visions of the future animate contemporary political action. Keywords: Resource extraction, mining, environmental imaginaries, timescapes, collective memory, environmental politics, emotionshttps://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/23210
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Erik Kojola
spellingShingle Erik Kojola
Divergent memories and visions of the future in conflicts over mining development
Journal of Political Ecology
author_facet Erik Kojola
author_sort Erik Kojola
title Divergent memories and visions of the future in conflicts over mining development
title_short Divergent memories and visions of the future in conflicts over mining development
title_full Divergent memories and visions of the future in conflicts over mining development
title_fullStr Divergent memories and visions of the future in conflicts over mining development
title_full_unstemmed Divergent memories and visions of the future in conflicts over mining development
title_sort divergent memories and visions of the future in conflicts over mining development
publisher University of Arizona Libraries
series Journal of Political Ecology
issn 1073-0451
publishDate 2020-11-01
description Conflicts over extractive development often center around predicting future profits and economic growth, and estimating industrial pollution. How these projections are understood and seen as legitimate and trustworthy depends on social actors' environmental imaginaries and timescapes. Thus, I examine the temporal and cultural dynamics of natural resource politics, particularly how affective connections to the past and future mobilize support and opposition to new mining. I use the case of proposed copper mines in the rural Minnesota Iron Range region to explore the different environmental imaginaries and timescapes that mining opponents and proponents use to understand the potential socio-environmental impacts, and to legitimate their positions. Proponents, including long-time and working class Iron Range residents and mining corporations, view the region as an industrial landscape built by mining and hope new proposals will renew the past to create a prosperous future. Meanwhile, environmental groups who oppose mining view the region through an environmental imaginary based on outdoor recreation, and draw on collective memories of family and youth trips to understand new extractive projects as a rupture to their vision of the future. I show that resource extraction is understood through temporalities that differ across intersections of class and region, and that emotional meanings of the past and visions of the future animate contemporary political action. Keywords: Resource extraction, mining, environmental imaginaries, timescapes, collective memory, environmental politics, emotions
url https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/23210
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