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Author: Admin | 2025-04-28

HirschThe Anthropology of Landscape: Perspectives on Place and Space(1995)S. HofmeisterNature’s temporalities: consequences for environmental politicsTime Soc.(1997)F. Hruschka et al.Rock-solid Chances. For Responsible Artisanal Mining, ARM Series on Responsible ASM(2011)T. IngoldThe Perception of the Environment: Essays on Livelihood, Dwelling and Skill(2000)H. JordheimIntroduction: multiple times and the work of synchronizationHist. Theory(2014)Cited by (77)Slow violence in mining and crude oil extractive frontiers: The overlooked resource curse in the Colombian internal armed conflict2022, Extractive Industries and SocietySome scholars have criticized how the latent and delayed temporality used to characterize slow violence has served to evade and exculpate research and action in toxic geographies (Hesse, 2019). With a spatialized thinking dominating the social study of extractive industries, pitfalls persist when addressing overlapping temporalities of extractive practices and the complex impacts of extractivism (D'Angelo and Pijpers, 2018). For example, Davis (2019) argues that, though in many cases victims perceive the violence and the impacts generated by the oil industry on their bodies and territories, those responsible for taking actions are not interested in accounting for its lengthened and compounded effects.View all citing articles on ScopusView full text© 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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