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引用次数: 8
摘要
在气候变化的背景下,电动汽车已经成为减少日益增长的交通部门排放的希望的象征。与此同时,中国也重新燃起了对锂等电池生产战略资源的兴趣。在开采领域,人们对锂矿开采的反应不一,有的希望获得有偿工作,有的希望增加收入,有的则抵制和冲突。基于2018年2月至2019年8月期间进行的广泛的民族志田野调查,本文将Salar de Olaroz-Cauchari和Salinas Grandes-Guayatayoc流域社区对锂开采的对立反应与不同的领土联系起来。在这样做的过程中,可以确定处理重叠领土的历史上不同的战略- -抵抗和谈判。在互惠关系的基础上,不同的策略和不同的领土是相互依赖的。在这两个案例研究中,与全球市场有关的新领土意味着具有不同风险的不同社会空间后果。以锂矿开采为例,可以看出,可持续转型仍然是基于社会生态不平等和全球权力不对称。
Changing territorialities in the Argentine Andes: lithium mining at Salar de Olaroz-Cauchari and Salinas Grandes
In the context of climate change, electro-mobility has become a symbol of hope to reduce the emissions of the growing transport sector. At the same time, it has also renewed interest in strategic resources utilized in battery production, such as lithium. In the areas of extraction, reactions to lithium mining range from hope for paid work and increased in-come to resistance and conflict. Based on extensive ethnographic fieldwork stays realized between February 2018 and August 2019, this article associates the opposed reactions to lithium mining in the communities of the drainage basins of Salar de Olaroz-Cauchari and Salinas Grandes-Guayatayoc with divergent territorialities. In doing so, historically different strategies – resistance and negotiation – of dealing with overlapping territorialities can be identified. Based on a reciprocal relationship, different strategies and divergent territorialities are mutually dependent. In the two case studies, the new territoriality related to the global market implies diverging socio-spatial consequences with different risks. Using the example of lithium mining, it can thus be shown that the sustainability transition continues to be based on social-ecological inequalities and global asymmetries of power.
期刊介绍:
DIE ERDE is a publication of the Geographical Society of Berlin
DIE ERDE is a scientific journal in Geography, with four issues per year with about 100 pages each. It covers all aspects of geographical research, focusing on both earth system studies and regional contributions.
DIE ERDE invites contributions from any subfield of both Physical and Human Geography as well as from neighbouring disciplines.