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Entangled disasters : Relations and vulnerabilities in the transformation and dissolution of Kiruna and Malmberget

Olofsson, Tobias LU orcid (2025) p.144-163
Abstract
This chapter explores the role of placed-based relational entanglements in disasters and argues that relations play an important part in shaping how disasters unfold. Exploring the case of mining-induced displacement in Sweden’s Malmfälten region—where two cities, Kiruna and Malmberget, and several villages are being moved or razed to make way for expanding mines—the chapter demonstrates how a strong geosymbiotic entanglement between the mines and cities in the region contributes to the normalization of the suffering and vulnerability experienced by displaced residents. Drawing on documentary films, newspaper articles, scholarly work, and other accounts of the move and dissolution of Kiruna and Malmberget, the chapter argues that phenomena... (More)
This chapter explores the role of placed-based relational entanglements in disasters and argues that relations play an important part in shaping how disasters unfold. Exploring the case of mining-induced displacement in Sweden’s Malmfälten region—where two cities, Kiruna and Malmberget, and several villages are being moved or razed to make way for expanding mines—the chapter demonstrates how a strong geosymbiotic entanglement between the mines and cities in the region contributes to the normalization of the suffering and vulnerability experienced by displaced residents. Drawing on documentary films, newspaper articles, scholarly work, and other accounts of the move and dissolution of Kiruna and Malmberget, the chapter argues that phenomena and events with disastrous outcomes may escape being labeled as disasters if the relations they affect are made to be less important than the relations that harbor the disaster. Based on these findings, the chapter highlights how disaster research, by centering relations rather than hazards, can gain new insights into how disastrous events and phenomena produce suffering and vulnerability that cannot easily be accommodated or explained through classical conceptualizations of disasters. (Less)
Abstract (Swedish)
This chapter discusses the role of placed-based relational entanglements in disasters and argues that relations play an important part in shaping how disasters unfold. Exploring the case of mining induced displacement in Sweden’s Malmfälten region – where two cities, Kiruna and Malmberget, and several villages are being moved or razed to make way for expanding mines – the chapter demonstrates how a strong geosymbiotic entanglement between the mines and cities in the region contributes to the normalization of the suffering and vulnerability experienced by displaced residents. Drawing on documentary films, newspaper articles, scholarly work, and other accounts of the move and dissolution of Kiruna and Malmberget, the chapter argues that... (More)
This chapter discusses the role of placed-based relational entanglements in disasters and argues that relations play an important part in shaping how disasters unfold. Exploring the case of mining induced displacement in Sweden’s Malmfälten region – where two cities, Kiruna and Malmberget, and several villages are being moved or razed to make way for expanding mines – the chapter demonstrates how a strong geosymbiotic entanglement between the mines and cities in the region contributes to the normalization of the suffering and vulnerability experienced by displaced residents. Drawing on documentary films, newspaper articles, scholarly work, and other accounts of the move and dissolution of Kiruna and Malmberget, the chapter argues that phenomena and events with disastrous outcomes may escape being labeled as disasters if the relations they affect are made to be less important than the relations that harbor the disaster. Based on these findings, the chapter highlights how disaster research, by centering relations rather than hazards, can gain new insights into how disastrous events and phenomena produce suffering and vulnerability that cannot easily be accommodated or explained through classical conceptualizations of disasters. Moreover, the chapter argues that an expansion of disasters to include slow-moving man-made disaster-like phenomena, such as those unfolding in Malmfälten, would open the door for further investigations into other creeping phenomena of human origin that threaten disastrous consequences, such as pollution, biodiversity loss, or global heating. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
epub
subject
host publication
Time of Disastrous Anticipations : Essays on life in the shadow of catastrophe - Essays on life in the shadow of catastrophe
editor
Staupe, Reidar and Bartoszewicz, Monika Gabriella
edition
1
pages
20 pages
publisher
Routledge
ISBN
9781032883441
9781003537311
DOI
10.4324/9781003537311-9
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
606bbf65-5ccf-4817-bdac-d77ae5c44070
date added to LUP
2025-04-22 13:39:33
date last changed
2025-06-06 03:25:40
@inbook{606bbf65-5ccf-4817-bdac-d77ae5c44070,
  abstract     = {{This chapter explores the role of placed-based relational entanglements in disasters and argues that relations play an important part in shaping how disasters unfold. Exploring the case of mining-induced displacement in Sweden’s Malmfälten region—where two cities, Kiruna and Malmberget, and several villages are being moved or razed to make way for expanding mines—the chapter demonstrates how a strong geosymbiotic entanglement between the mines and cities in the region contributes to the normalization of the suffering and vulnerability experienced by displaced residents. Drawing on documentary films, newspaper articles, scholarly work, and other accounts of the move and dissolution of Kiruna and Malmberget, the chapter argues that phenomena and events with disastrous outcomes may escape being labeled as disasters if the relations they affect are made to be less important than the relations that harbor the disaster. Based on these findings, the chapter highlights how disaster research, by centering relations rather than hazards, can gain new insights into how disastrous events and phenomena produce suffering and vulnerability that cannot easily be accommodated or explained through classical conceptualizations of disasters.}},
  author       = {{Olofsson, Tobias}},
  booktitle    = {{Time of Disastrous Anticipations : Essays on life in the shadow of catastrophe}},
  editor       = {{Staupe, Reidar and Bartoszewicz, Monika Gabriella}},
  isbn         = {{9781032883441}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{06}},
  pages        = {{144--163}},
  publisher    = {{Routledge}},
  title        = {{Entangled disasters : Relations and vulnerabilities in the transformation and dissolution of Kiruna and Malmberget}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003537311-9}},
  doi          = {{10.4324/9781003537311-9}},
  year         = {{2025}},
}