A study in dispossession: the political ecology of phosphate in Tunisia

This article seeks to evidence the social, environmental and political repercussions of phosphate extraction and transformation on two peripheral Tunisian cities (Gabes and Gafsa). After positing the difference between class environmentalism and political ecology, it addresses the harmful effects of...

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Main Author: Mathieu Rousselin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Arizona Libraries 2018-02-01
Series:Journal of Political Ecology
Online Access:https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/22006
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spelling doaj-b7f73034adf540df992fd4976fff41c12020-11-25T01:08:41ZengUniversity of Arizona LibrariesJournal of Political Ecology1073-04512018-02-01251203910.2458/v25i1.2200621378A study in dispossession: the political ecology of phosphate in TunisiaMathieu RousselinThis article seeks to evidence the social, environmental and political repercussions of phosphate extraction and transformation on two peripheral Tunisian cities (Gabes and Gafsa). After positing the difference between class environmentalism and political ecology, it addresses the harmful effects of phosphate transformation on the world's last coastal oasis and on various cities of the Gulf of Gabes. It then sheds light on the gross social, environmental and health inequalities brought about by phosphate extraction in the mining region of Gafsa. The confiscatory practices of the phosphate industry are subsequently linked with global production and distribution chains at the international level as well as with centralized and authoritarian forms of government at the national and local level. Dispossessed local communities have few alternatives other than violent protest movements and emigration towards urban centers of wealth. Using the recent experience in self-government in the Jemna palm grove, the article ends with a reflection on the possible forms of subaltern resistance to transnational extractivism and highlights the ambiguous role of the new "democratic state" as a power structure reproducing patterns of domination and repression inherited from the colonial period and cemented under the dictatorship of Ben Ali. Keywords: political ecology, transnational extractivism, phosphate, Tunisia.https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/22006
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mathieu Rousselin
spellingShingle Mathieu Rousselin
A study in dispossession: the political ecology of phosphate in Tunisia
Journal of Political Ecology
author_facet Mathieu Rousselin
author_sort Mathieu Rousselin
title A study in dispossession: the political ecology of phosphate in Tunisia
title_short A study in dispossession: the political ecology of phosphate in Tunisia
title_full A study in dispossession: the political ecology of phosphate in Tunisia
title_fullStr A study in dispossession: the political ecology of phosphate in Tunisia
title_full_unstemmed A study in dispossession: the political ecology of phosphate in Tunisia
title_sort study in dispossession: the political ecology of phosphate in tunisia
publisher University of Arizona Libraries
series Journal of Political Ecology
issn 1073-0451
publishDate 2018-02-01
description This article seeks to evidence the social, environmental and political repercussions of phosphate extraction and transformation on two peripheral Tunisian cities (Gabes and Gafsa). After positing the difference between class environmentalism and political ecology, it addresses the harmful effects of phosphate transformation on the world's last coastal oasis and on various cities of the Gulf of Gabes. It then sheds light on the gross social, environmental and health inequalities brought about by phosphate extraction in the mining region of Gafsa. The confiscatory practices of the phosphate industry are subsequently linked with global production and distribution chains at the international level as well as with centralized and authoritarian forms of government at the national and local level. Dispossessed local communities have few alternatives other than violent protest movements and emigration towards urban centers of wealth. Using the recent experience in self-government in the Jemna palm grove, the article ends with a reflection on the possible forms of subaltern resistance to transnational extractivism and highlights the ambiguous role of the new "democratic state" as a power structure reproducing patterns of domination and repression inherited from the colonial period and cemented under the dictatorship of Ben Ali. Keywords: political ecology, transnational extractivism, phosphate, Tunisia.
url https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/22006
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