The anticipatory politics of dispossession in a senegalese mining negotiation

8Citations
Citations of this article
18Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

The concept of accumulation by dispossession is often mobilized in political ecological and geographical literature, to explain the ways that capitalist accumulation depends on the violent and extra-economic seizure of land and resources. Yet dispossession is also mobilized as a fear about the future, as a way of articulating historical and non-capitalist motivations for land expropriation, and as an avenue for political action. Amid negotiations for a heavy mineral sands mine in the Casamance region of Senegal, narratives of dispossession circulated frequently, even though no mining had yet taken place. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork and qualitative interviews, this article examines the contentious politics around the proposed mine, which mobilize multiple timescales. In this context, activists and village residents have engaged in an anticipatory politics that is influenced by past and present processes of land occupancy, environmental change, and state disinvestment, and is aimed at contesting potential dispossessions to come, making claims to resources, and securing a place in the imagined future. At the same time, state and corporate actors have engaged in their own anticipatory actions, through environmental impact assessments and other technologies of prediction that minimize, invalidate, or circumvent anti-dispossession movements. This article argues that experiences of and resistances to dispossession are mediated by the folding together of temporal frames and diverse displacements. In particular, it attends to anticipation as a key temporal mechanism through which dispossession is both enacted and contested. As such, it contributes to political ecology by combining materialist conceptions of dispossession and displacement with theorizations of anticipation and the future.

References Powered by Scopus

A theory of access

1764Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

The extended case method

1693Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Green Grabbing: A new appropriation of nature?

1391Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Cited by Powered by Scopus

Political ecologies of time and temporality in resource extraction

21Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Dams, Diversions, and Development: Slow Resistance and Authoritarian Rule in the Salween River Basin

18Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Coastal sand mining of heavy mineral sands: Contestations, resistance, and ecological distribution conflicts at HMS extraction frontiers across the world

13Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Fent, A. (2020). The anticipatory politics of dispossession in a senegalese mining negotiation. Journal of Political Ecology, 27(1). https://doi.org/10.2458/V27I1.23221

Readers' Seniority

Tooltip

PhD / Post grad / Masters / Doc 6

60%

Professor / Associate Prof. 2

20%

Lecturer / Post doc 1

10%

Researcher 1

10%

Readers' Discipline

Tooltip

Social Sciences 5

63%

Philosophy 1

13%

Engineering 1

13%

Agricultural and Biological Sciences 1

13%

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free