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Slow Violence and the Elusiveness of Space and Time

Kakoseos Marko, Georgina LU (2022) STVK12 20221
Department of Political Science
Abstract
This thesis analyzes a case of transnational environmental justice between Chile and Sweden following toxic waste exports in the 1980’s. Thematic analysis is applied to explore concepts of time and space presented amongst the different actors. Drawing from decolonial environmental justice theory, the thesis compares the use of linear Western time and the indigenous concept of Pachamama. The second part of the analysis is through the intersectional theory, which shows how space and time manifest in different ways depending on race, class, gender and ability. The thesis finds the actors strategically mobilize the concepts of time and space, within decoloniality and intersectionality, which influence the visibility of slow violence. A... (More)
This thesis analyzes a case of transnational environmental justice between Chile and Sweden following toxic waste exports in the 1980’s. Thematic analysis is applied to explore concepts of time and space presented amongst the different actors. Drawing from decolonial environmental justice theory, the thesis compares the use of linear Western time and the indigenous concept of Pachamama. The second part of the analysis is through the intersectional theory, which shows how space and time manifest in different ways depending on race, class, gender and ability. The thesis finds the actors strategically mobilize the concepts of time and space, within decoloniality and intersectionality, which influence the visibility of slow violence. A disconnection between time and space conceals slow violence, which ultimately limits environmental justice. However, an interconnectedness of time and space reveals slow violence, and supports the affected community’s claims to justice. (Less)
Popular Abstract
This thesis analyzes a case of transnational environmental justice between Chile and Sweden following toxic waste exports in the 1980’s. Thematic analysis is applied to explore concepts of time and space presented amongst the different actors. Drawing from decolonial environmental justice theory, the thesis compares the use of linear Western time and the indigenous concept of Pachamama. The second part of the analysis is through the intersectional theory, which shows how space and time manifest in different ways depending on race, class, gender and ability. The thesis finds the actors strategically mobilize the concepts of time and space, within decoloniality and intersectionality, which influence the visibility of slow violence. A... (More)
This thesis analyzes a case of transnational environmental justice between Chile and Sweden following toxic waste exports in the 1980’s. Thematic analysis is applied to explore concepts of time and space presented amongst the different actors. Drawing from decolonial environmental justice theory, the thesis compares the use of linear Western time and the indigenous concept of Pachamama. The second part of the analysis is through the intersectional theory, which shows how space and time manifest in different ways depending on race, class, gender and ability. The thesis finds the actors strategically mobilize the concepts of time and space, within decoloniality and intersectionality, which influence the visibility of slow violence. A disconnection between time and space conceals slow violence, which ultimately limits environmental justice. However, an interconnectedness of time and space reveals slow violence, and supports the affected community’s claims to justice. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Kakoseos Marko, Georgina LU
supervisor
organization
alternative title
A case study of how the slow violence of Swedish toxic waste dumping shape environmental justice in Arica, Chile
course
STVK12 20221
year
type
M2 - Bachelor Degree
subject
keywords
toxic waste, decolonial environmental justice, slow violence, intersectionality, Chile, Sweden
language
English
id
9081616
date added to LUP
2022-07-03 08:49:30
date last changed
2022-07-03 08:49:31
@misc{9081616,
  abstract     = {{This thesis analyzes a case of transnational environmental justice between Chile and Sweden following toxic waste exports in the 1980’s. Thematic analysis is applied to explore concepts of time and space presented amongst the different actors. Drawing from decolonial environmental justice theory, the thesis compares the use of linear Western time and the indigenous concept of Pachamama. The second part of the analysis is through the intersectional theory, which shows how space and time manifest in different ways depending on race, class, gender and ability. The thesis finds the actors strategically mobilize the concepts of time and space, within decoloniality and intersectionality, which influence the visibility of slow violence. A disconnection between time and space conceals slow violence, which ultimately limits environmental justice. However, an interconnectedness of time and space reveals slow violence, and supports the affected community’s claims to justice.}},
  author       = {{Kakoseos Marko, Georgina}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Slow Violence and the Elusiveness of Space and Time}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}