Barbara Müller (Freiburg i.Br.)
Goldgräbergeschichten - eine politisch-ökologische
Betrachtung des Gold- und Diamantenabbaus in den Wäldern Südost-Venezuelas
Pages 229 - 244
The study focuses on an analysis of actors and socio-economic
processes concerning gold and diamond mining activities in Bolívar
State/Venezuela. Mining activities in these areas have various impacts
on the natural environment, most prominent of all the clearing of patches
of tropical forest, mercury pollution and river sedimentation. Concerning
the actors involved, it needs to be considered that on one hand, mining
is an important source of income and a survival strategy for impoverished
people in Venezuela as the formal economy can not offer job opportunities
to half of the population. On the other hand, also large-scale, industrial
mining companies have shown growing interest in mineral exploitation in
the region since the 1980s. This situation has caused severe conflicts
between environmentalists and mining interests and between large scale
mining companies and small scale miners who are fighting over access rights
to mineral resources. Discussing the mining activities in the Bolívar
State in abstract terms of international and national market demands and/or
in ecological discourses, and locating them in an anonymous space and
abstract terms, delinks mining from its larger historical and socio-economic
context and obstructs the view on important decision-making processes
concerning the Venezuelan mining sector. By using the Third World Political
Ecology approach this study will show that effective conflict management
needs to realize that the physical region overlaps with a social space
involving a large diversity of regional and non-regional actors. A central
aim of the study is to scrutinize regulation practices, legitimization
and representation strategies of central actors (small-scale miners, mining
companies, state representatives, NGOs...) in order to get a deeper -
in the Venezuelan context embedded - understanding of forest destruction
by mining activities.
schließen