Organized Violence
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Organized Violence

Capitalist Warfare in Latin America

Dawn Paley, Simon Granovsky-Larsen

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eBook - ePub

Organized Violence

Capitalist Warfare in Latin America

Dawn Paley, Simon Granovsky-Larsen

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Official stories from media centers in New York and Mexico City say that most violence in Latin America is a product of the drug trade. Organized Violence exposes how that narrative serves corporate and state interests and de-politicizes situations that have more to do with coal, oil, or rare wood extraction than with cocaine. Global capital and violence reinforce conditions that fortify the current economic order, and whether it be the military, police, or death squads that pull the trigger, economic expansion benefits from the violent elimination of the opposition, who are most often dispossessed Indigenous people.

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Informations

Éditeur
U of R Press
Année
2019
ISBN
9780889776128



Organized
Violence
Capitalist Warfare
in Latin America



Edited by
Dawn Paley and
Simon Granovsky-Larsen









Contents





List of Tables, Figures, and Illustrations
Maps: Conflict Sites Featured in the Book

Introduction: Organized Violence and the Expansion of Capital
Simon Granovsky-Larsen and Dawn Paley
Part I: Central and South America
Chapter 1: Extreme Energy Injustice and the Expansion of Capital
Mary Finley-Brook
Chapter 2: “The Most Dangerous Country in the World”: Violence and Capital in Post-Coup Honduras
Tyler Shipley
Chapter 3: Under Siege: Peaceful Resistance to Tahoe Resources and Militarization in Guatemala
Luis Solano
Chapter 4: Deadly Soy: The Violent Expansion of Paraguay’s Agro-Extractive Frontier
Arturo Ezquerro-Cañete
Chapter 5: “And Then the Palm Farmers Came”: Violence and Women’s Resistance in the Colombian Afro-Pacific Region
Paula Balduino de Melo
Chapter 6: Coal and Conflict: Transnational Investment, Violence, and the Extraction of Mineral Resources in Colombia
Rosalvina Otålora Cortés
Part II: Mexico
Chapter 7: Oil, Gas, and Guns: War, Privatization, and Violence in Tamaulipas, Mexico
Guadalupe Correa-Cabrera and Carlos Daniel Gutiérrez-Mannix
Chapter 8: Legal and Illegal Violence in Mexico: Organized Crime, Politics, and Mining in MichoacĂĄn
Ana Del Conde and Heriberto Paredes Coronel
Chapter 9: Criminal Violence and Armed Community Defence in Mexico
Antonio Fuentes DĂ­az
Chapter 10: LĂĄzaro CĂĄrdenas, MichoacĂĄn: From Mining Enclave to Global Hub
Patricia Alvarado Portillo
Chapter 11: Elites, Violence, and Resources in Veracruz, Mexico
Michelle Arroyo Fonseca and Jorge Rebolledo Flores
Chapter 12: Punitive Dispossession: Authoritarian Neoliberalism and the Road to Mass Incarceration
Elva F. Orozco Mendoza
Conclusion: Violence, Expansion, Resistance
Simon Granovsky-Larsen and Dawn Paley
Acknowledgements
About the Contributors




List of Tables, Figures, and Illustrations





Table 1.1. Tenets of Energy Justice
Table 1.2. Assassinated Anti-Dam Activists by Country, 2000–2016
Table 1.3. Comparative Analysis of Three Dams
Table 1.4. Review of ifc Oversight of Dinant Corporation, Honduras
Table 1.5. Comparative Analysis of Toxic Hotspots
Table 1.6. Local Energy System-Conflict Interactions
Table 1.7. Energy Injustice, Structural Violence, and Conflict Triggers
Table 4.1. Paraguay, Land Surface Dedicated to Soy Production by Department (Hectares), 1991–2015
Table 7.1. Homicides in Tamaulipas, 2000–2017

Figure 1.1. Anti-Dam Activists Murdered in Latin America, 2008–2015
Figure 7.1. Homicides in Tamaulipas, 2000–2017
Figure 10.1. Methamphetamine Interdiction and Iron Mining Production, World and Michoacán, 2006–2014

Illustration 5.1. Location of Tumaco, Colombia, and Surrounding Rivers
Illustration 7.1. Tamaulipas: A Strategic Mexican Border State
Illustration 7.2. Hydrocarbons in Tamaulipas i
Illustration 7.3. Hydrocarbons in Tamaulipas ii
Illustration 7.4. New Infrastructure in Tamaulipas
Illustration 7.5. Violence in Tamaulipas




Maps

Map 1: Featured Conflict Sites in Mexico and Central America


Map 2: Featured Conflict Sites in South America




Introduction

Organized Violence and the Expansion of Capital
Simon Granovsky-Larsen and Dawn Paley
In early 2007, a public prosecutor in a suit with short, spiky hair, backed by hundreds of police and dozens of individuals with their faces covered to prevent identification, entered the lakeside lands occupied by Indigenous Q’eqchi’ people near the town of El Estor, Guatemala. Conflict had been ongoing for generations (Grandin 2004), and it came to a head again after local people grew tired of subsisting on tiny lots, and began to build houses on farmlands claimed at the time by Vancouver-based mining company Skye Resources. The lands had lain fallow for decades before Syke Resources attempted to reactivate the project, which was sold to Hudbay in 2008 and again to the Solway Group in 2011.
Filmmakers and journalists—including one of the editors of this volume—documented the evictions, which escalated from forced removal of community members by hired labourers, to the participation of soldiers and the burning of houses the next day, to the gang rape of eleven women in a more remote community days later. Following the dramatic and painful incidents in 2007, Adolfo Ich Chamán was shot and hacked to death by company security guards in 2009, and Germán Chub was shot and paralyzed in the same incident (see chocversushudbay.com).
The spectacular and organized violence set off against Q’eqchi’ people near Lake Izabal ten years ago was intended to clear the way for a nickel mine: Skye Resources planned to restart the FĂ©nix Project, first floated by the Canadian mining company Inco in the 1960s. An array of state and non-state armed actors has participated in repressive violence in the region since the first arrival of Inco. During the evictions in early 2007, Guatemala...

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