“If we rebuild the kitchen, we rebuild the heart”: Post-relief transformational politics in the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, Mexico

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Abstract

In September 2017, the strongest earthquake in the last century shook the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, Mexico, the region hosting the largest concentration of wind turbines in Mexico. In the municipalities with over 1600 wind turbines, the seismic shock affected 70% of the dwellings. After the disaster, community organisations undertook efforts to foster collective processes of territorial autonomy in towns hosting wind projects or expected to host projects in the future. Drawing on participant ethnographic methods and long-term collaboration with social movements, this article provides insights into the processes whereby disaster recovery holds the potential for territorial practices that imply a shift away from capitalist norms to alternative practices of territorial autonomy, sufficiency and rebellion. To this end, the article analyses a women-led kitchen reconstruction project implemented by the Assembly of Indigenous People of the Isthmus in Defence of Land and Territory (APIIDTT) to re-activate local economies through endemic crops and traditional crafts in six towns of the region. While emphasising broader tensions, pressures and contradictions resulting from disaster capitalism, the article argues that the project fostered collective autonomy processes against present and future extractive projects through endemic crops, traditional crafts and the identification of female leadership within and across the communities. Therefore, the article spotlights the different forms of bottom-up emancipatory politics that emerge in post-disaster contexts while interlinking them with wind power expansion.

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APA

Torres Contreras, G. A., & Flores Cruz, R. M. (2025). “If we rebuild the kitchen, we rebuild the heart”: Post-relief transformational politics in the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, Mexico. Human Geography (United Kingdom). https://doi.org/10.1177/19427786241313253

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