Extractivism: Difference between revisions
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Examples of extractivism | ==Examples of extractivism== | ||
The exploitation of people <ref>https://www.resilience.org/stories/2020-08-05/extractivism/</ref> | ===The exploitation of people <ref>https://www.resilience.org/stories/2020-08-05/extractivism/</ref>=== | ||
Exploitation for resources has appropriated human bodies in the form of slaves or, more recently, as labor-intensive workers. | Exploitation for resources has appropriated human bodies in the form of slaves or, more recently, as labor-intensive workers. | ||
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The exploitation of Latin America, Africa and Asia <ref>https://www.resilience.org/stories/2020-08-05/extractivism/</ref> | ===The exploitation of Latin America, Africa and Asia <ref>https://www.resilience.org/stories/2020-08-05/extractivism/</ref>=== | ||
You can’t tell the history of the colonies without talking about the looting of minerals, metals, and other high-value resources. European crowns and later the United States looted resources in Latin America, Africa, and Asia | You can’t tell the history of the colonies without talking about the looting of minerals, metals, and other high-value resources. European crowns and later the United States looted resources in Latin America, Africa, and Asia |
Revision as of 14:24, 18 September 2022
Extractivism is the exploitation of natural resources on a mass scale, creating significant economic profits for a few powerful people and corporations in the short term, but too often resulting in minimal benefits for the communities resources are found in; driver of displacement, health inequities, human rights violations, ecological degradation, and colonial violence - Columban Center, adapted by Michelle Xie [1]
Extractivism can be traced back more than 500 years all the way to the European colonial expansion.
Examples of extractivism
The exploitation of people [2]
Exploitation for resources has appropriated human bodies in the form of slaves or, more recently, as labor-intensive workers.
The exploitation of Latin America, Africa and Asia [3]
You can’t tell the history of the colonies without talking about the looting of minerals, metals, and other high-value resources. European crowns and later the United States looted resources in Latin America, Africa, and Asia
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