Description

Book Synopsis
Renewing Destruction examines how wind energy projects impact people and their environments. Wind energy development, in Mexico and most countries, fall into a ‘roll out’ neoliberal strategy that is justified by climate change mitigation programs that are continuing a process of land and wind resources grabbing for profit. The result has been an exaggeration of pre-existing problems in communities around land, income-inequality, local politics and, contrary to public relations stories, is devastating traditional livelihoods and socio-ecological relationships. Exacerbating pre-existing social and material problems in surrounding towns, wind energy development is placing greater stress on semi-subsistence communities, marginalizing Indigenous traditions and indirectly resulting in the displacement and migration of people into urban centers. Based on intensive fieldwork with local groups in Oaxaca Mexico in 2015, the book provides an in-depth study, demonstrating the complications and problems that emerge with the current regime of ‘sustainable development’ and wind energy projects in Mexico, which has wider lessons to be drawn for other regions and countries. Put simply, the book reveals a tragic reality that calls into question the marketed hopes of the green economy and the current method of climate change mitigation. It shows the variegated impacts and issues associated with building wind energy parks, which extends to recognizing the destructive effects on Indigenous cultures and practices in the region. The book, however, highlights what to consider or, more importantly, what to avoid if one is working with industrial-scale wind energy systems.

Trade Review
Renewing Destruction lays bare the structural violence that underpins the imposition of industrial-scale wind energy projects in the Mexican state of Oaxaca. Accessible, historically rooted, and attuned to popular resistance, Dunlap's writing blows apart the myths of clean power and green capitalism. -- Dawn Marie Paley, Author of Drug War Capitalism

Table of Contents
Preface / Introduction / 1. A Brief History of Politics, Conflict and Development / 2. ''We are Surrounded:' Living under Wind Turbines in La Ventosa / 3. Communal Land, Resistance and Pacification for Renewable Energy / 4. Insurrection for Land, Sea and Dignity: Álvaro Obregón and the struggle for Autonomy / 5. Redressing, Improving or Continuing the Old in New Ways? / 6. Renewing Destruction: Colonization and Cultural Genocide in Relation to Wind Energy Development / 7. Conclusion

Renewing Destruction: Wind Energy Development,

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    A Paperback / softback by Alexander A. Dunlap

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      View other formats and editions of Renewing Destruction: Wind Energy Development, by Alexander A. Dunlap

      Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield International
      Publication Date: 21/06/2019
      ISBN13: 9781786610669, 978-1786610669
      ISBN10: 1786610663

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Renewing Destruction examines how wind energy projects impact people and their environments. Wind energy development, in Mexico and most countries, fall into a ‘roll out’ neoliberal strategy that is justified by climate change mitigation programs that are continuing a process of land and wind resources grabbing for profit. The result has been an exaggeration of pre-existing problems in communities around land, income-inequality, local politics and, contrary to public relations stories, is devastating traditional livelihoods and socio-ecological relationships. Exacerbating pre-existing social and material problems in surrounding towns, wind energy development is placing greater stress on semi-subsistence communities, marginalizing Indigenous traditions and indirectly resulting in the displacement and migration of people into urban centers. Based on intensive fieldwork with local groups in Oaxaca Mexico in 2015, the book provides an in-depth study, demonstrating the complications and problems that emerge with the current regime of ‘sustainable development’ and wind energy projects in Mexico, which has wider lessons to be drawn for other regions and countries. Put simply, the book reveals a tragic reality that calls into question the marketed hopes of the green economy and the current method of climate change mitigation. It shows the variegated impacts and issues associated with building wind energy parks, which extends to recognizing the destructive effects on Indigenous cultures and practices in the region. The book, however, highlights what to consider or, more importantly, what to avoid if one is working with industrial-scale wind energy systems.

      Trade Review
      Renewing Destruction lays bare the structural violence that underpins the imposition of industrial-scale wind energy projects in the Mexican state of Oaxaca. Accessible, historically rooted, and attuned to popular resistance, Dunlap's writing blows apart the myths of clean power and green capitalism. -- Dawn Marie Paley, Author of Drug War Capitalism

      Table of Contents
      Preface / Introduction / 1. A Brief History of Politics, Conflict and Development / 2. ''We are Surrounded:' Living under Wind Turbines in La Ventosa / 3. Communal Land, Resistance and Pacification for Renewable Energy / 4. Insurrection for Land, Sea and Dignity: Álvaro Obregón and the struggle for Autonomy / 5. Redressing, Improving or Continuing the Old in New Ways? / 6. Renewing Destruction: Colonization and Cultural Genocide in Relation to Wind Energy Development / 7. Conclusion

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