让国家回归锂三角:智利、阿根廷和玻利维亚资源民族主义的制度分析

IF 3.6 2区 社会学 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES
Craig A. Johnson , Araceli Clavijo , Mauricio Lorca , Manuel Olivera Andrade
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引用次数: 0

摘要

国际社会为应对气候变化所做的努力引发了全球对用于生产锂离子电池和电动汽车(EV)的 "关键金属 "需求的激增。其中,锂是一种重要的战略成分,只集中在有限的几个开采区。理论上,有限的供应和强劲的需求为生产国创造了有利条件。在实践中,许多国家一直在努力将电池级锂的生产国有化,这反映了跨国公司在该行业中的主导地位。本文探讨了智利、阿根廷和玻利维亚的生产国为驾驭这一快速变化的动态所采取的策略,指出近期对电池金属需求的激增为挑战跨国资本的寡头垄断创造了新机遇,但政府为提高锂衍生品生产中的收入、技术能力和经济机会而调整生产联系的能力,在结构上和历史上仍然受到这三个国家不同的国有化和社会动员制度遗产的制约。借鉴 "政治解决 "的文献,我们认为,国家和国家以下各级对锂行业施加更大控制的努力,可归因于政治竞争的制度遗产,以及社会行动者在打造新的权力配置、挑战占主导地位的国家-企业联盟方面所发挥的作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Bringing the state back in the lithium triangle: An institutional analysis of resource nationalism in Chile, Argentina, and Bolivia

International efforts to tackle climate change have ignited a global surge in demand for the “critical metals” that are used in the production of lithium-ion batteries and electric vehicles (EVs). Among them, lithium represents a critical strategic component that is concentrated in only a limited number of extractive zones. In theory, limited availability and strong demand creates favourable conditions for producer states. In practice, many states have struggled to nationalize the production of battery-grade lithium, reflecting the dominant role that multinational corporations play in the sector. This paper explores the strategies that producer states in Chile, Argentina, and Bolivia have used to navigate this rapidly changing dynamic, making the case that the recent surge in demand for battery metals has created new opportunities for challenging the oligopoly of multinational capital but the ability of governments to reorient production linkages for enhancing incomes, technical capacity, and economic opportunity in the production of lithium derivatives remains structurally and historically constrained by the institutional legacies of nationalization and social mobilization that vary across the three states. Drawing upon the “political settlements” literature, we contend that national and subnational efforts to exert greater control over the lithium sector can be attributed to the institutional legacy of political contestation and the role of social actors in crafting new power configurations that challenge dominant state-business coalitions.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.60
自引率
19.40%
发文量
135
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