CAL Department of Comparative Cultural Studies
Virtual Visit Request info Apply
MENUMENU
  • Degrees & programs
    • Undergraduate
      • Bachelor of Arts in Comparative Cultural Studies
        •      Art History
        •      Asian Studies
        •      Comparative Study of      Religions
        •      Public Humanities
        •      Museum Studies
      • Bachelor of Arts in Asian Studies - Integrated Global Program
      • Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies - Humanities 90-30
    • Minors
      • Art History
      • Asian Studies
      • Comparative Study of Religions
      • Humanities
      • Museum Studies
  • Resources
    • Student resources
    • Advising
      • Planning a course of study
      • Degree checklist
      • Advisors
    • Scholarships
    • Internships
  • Events
  • Study Abroad
  • About
    • Faculty & Staff Directory
      • Meet Our Faculty & Staff
    • News
  • NAU
  • CAL
  • Department of Comparative Cultural Studies
  • Upcoming Latin American Studies lecture with Nate Edenhofer

Upcoming Latin American Studies lecture with Nate Edenhofer

Posted by Rebekah Pratt-Sturges on February 5, 2024

Latin American Studies presents “Disrupting Mining in Honduras: Hegemony, Territorial Struggles, and Contradictions of the Neo-Liberal Mafia-State,” a talk by Nate Edenhofer (University of California Santa Cruz) on February 8 at 6 p.m. in Liberal Art room 136. This event is co-sponsored by the department of Politics and International Affairs and the department of Comparative Cultural Studies.
Anti-mining movements have put extractivism on the defensive in Honduras.‌ Why did mining production fail to expand in Honduras despite some of—if not the— most aggressive pro-extractive reforms on the continent?‌ Both existing theories of extractivism and social movements have difficulty explaining this outcome.
Interrogate the conflict between extraction, public health, and the environment with Nate Edenhofer of UCSC. He will share information gathered from 45 interviews with Hondurans and trace the strategies of capital, the state, and social movements.‌ Learn how the economic, ideological, and emotional foundations of extractive hegemony were undermined in Honduras through the coercive approach of pro-mining actors; the development of anti-extractivist consciousness via antagonistic struggle and organization; and a neoliberal state stuck in a contradiction.‌
The image depicts a sepia via of resource extraction against a barren landscape with a small image of a man in a flannel shirt and ball cap. The long description repeats the text in the image.

Filed Under: Latin American Studies, Public Humanities

Department of Comparative Cultural Studies
Location
Room 104 Main Office Building 15
Riles
317 W Tormey Dr.
Flagstaff, Arizona 86011
Mailing Address
P.O. Box 6031
Flagstaff, Arizona 86011
Email
ComparativeCulturalStudies@nau.edu
Phone
928-523-3881
Social Media
Facebook Instagram LinkedIn