Denisse Vega’s research while affiliated with Pontifical Catholic University of Chile and other places

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Publications (1)


Bude uncommon: extractivist endings and the unthinkable politics of conservation in Lafkenche territory
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November 2021

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1 Citation

Tapuya Latin American Science Technology and Society

Manuel Tironi

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Denisse Vega

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Juan Roa Antileo

Tubul-Raqui, in the Lafkenche territory of Arauco, southern Chile, is a wetland for conservation scientists and state officials, but a bude for Lafkenche people. Wetland and bude sometimes coincide, but they are also radically divergent. This paper, a collaboration between two scholars and a Lafkenche longko, is about the existential and political consequences of this disjuncture for Lafkenche life projects and struggles for self-determination. By chronicling two recent events in Tubul-Raqui – the implementation of a sustainable plan for wetland conservation and the 2010 tsunami – we argue that liberal conservation programs under the rubric of “sustainability,” or what we call convivial conservation, only reinforce Indigenous disspossesion and extenuates Lafkenche lives. We show, as well, that the decolonization of conservation entails accounting for the plural meanings, practices, and temporalities of extinction – since death in Tubul-Raqui was not brought by the tsunami but by the extreme latency of extractivism, or what we call extractivist endings. We conclude by reflecting on the political trap faced by Lafkenche communities in Tubul-Raqui – the impossibilty to save the bude without converting it into a wetland – and to what extent this situation demands for a mode of politics that inhabits at the intersection between the plausible and the unconceivable – or what we call an unthinkable politics.

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Citations (1)


... Intersections with conservation initiatives also highlight the need to overcome colonialist practices that do not account for the social costs of losing access to land and resources owing to conservation policies or inadequate participatory processes (Trisos, Auerbach, and Katti 2021;Tironi, Vega, and Antileo 2021;Staddon, Nightingale, and Shrestha 2015). Even in Amazonia, where indigenous, Quilombola, and traditional peoples have a long and recognized presence in the socioenvironmental movement, an instrumentalist perspective to conservation prevails (Lima 2019). ...

Reference:

Engagement in a Citizen Science Project in the Amazon Basin
Bude uncommon: extractivist endings and the unthinkable politics of conservation in Lafkenche territory

Tapuya Latin American Science Technology and Society