Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) M.D. Bonner , A. Taylor , Eduardo Rabossi
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) University of Victoria Libraries
ANO 1995
TIPO Book
CITAÇÕES 1
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-14
MD5 86F452AF48353734E9526E1A900D5CF1

Resumo

Since the 1980s, liberalized and newly stable markets have helped usher in an unprecedented mining boom across the Latin American region. However, despite the fact that this boom contributes to notable economic growth, protests in opposition to the expansion and practices of mining companies have also grown, often with violent results. How protests are policed matters, but more important for democracy is how state actors respond when violence is employed. We examine two instances of police repression of mining protests: one in Cajamarca, Peru, and the other in Catamarca, Argentina. We argue that, despite significant differences in context, there are important similarities in state discourse between countries. In particular, a vocabulary of protester wrongdoing and calls for a remedy of 'dialogue' are employed in both cases as a way to facilitate the continuation and expansion of both mining and the repression of protests.

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