1st Edition

Fighting Global Neo-Extractivism Fossil-Free Social Movements in South Africa

By Jasper Finkeldey Copyright 2023
162 Pages 4 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

162 Pages 4 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

162 Pages 4 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Fighting Global Neo-Extractivism: Fossil-Free Social Movements in South Africa analyzes social struggles over damaging new fossil fuel projects in the Global South with a focus on South Africa, Africa’s biggest fossil fuel emitter. Fossil fuel extraction in South Africa has reached a new accelerated phase in which the fossil fuel frontier is moving beyond historical ‘sacrifice zones’ into... Read more

1. Introduction

Neo-extractivism, fossil fuels, and the climate crisis in South Africa

Post-apartheid state and social movements

Structure of the book

Part I. Theory and practice of resource extractivism

2. Resource frontiers and hegemony

Resource frontiers

Organising hegemony

3. Fossil fuel dependency in South Africa

Emergence and consolidation of the historical bloc around fossil fuels

Post-apartheid fossil fuel politics

Regulatory framework

Conclusion

Part II. Social movements fighting fossil fuels

4. Counter-hegemonic social movements

Spaces of social movement struggles

Leadership in social movement action

An ethnographic approach to social movements

5. Leadership and framing in Fuleni’s anti-coal movement

Place history and land use in Fuleni

Frame setting: Starting a conservation campaign

Conclusion and discussion: frame processes in the iMfolozi Wilderness Campaign

6. Movement tactics for a frack free South Africa

A moral shock: Potential fracking in KwaZulu-Natal

Four tactics against fracking

Conclusions and discussion

7. Fighting fossil fuels around the world

Germany: ‘Coal exit is a handicraft’

Common frontlines: fossil-free struggles in South Africa and Germany

Global struggles at the fossil fuel frontier

Biography

Jasper Finkeldey is a Postdoctoral Researcher and Lecturer in Political Science in the Faculty of Social Sciences and Cultural Studies at the Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg, Germany. His interdisciplinary research focuses on environmental politics, social movements, political economy, and conflicts over resources.

'Social movements to contest the expansion of fossil fuel frontiers provide a vital line of defence in the struggle against runaway climate change. In this book, Jasper Finkeldey expertly combines theoretical insights about the power of fossil fuel industries with new empirical research on the way in which movements to contest coal mining and fracking in South Africa are resisting fossil fuel hegemony. The book will be of great interest to scholars and activists alike.' - Peter Newell, University of Sussex, UK

'South Africa has gained notice on the international stage for its commitments to slow the pace of climate change. As Jasper Finkeldey demonstrates in his important new book, however, the country is dominated by powerful energy interests with every intention of boosting South Africa's fossil fuel production - at whatever risk to the planet, the local environment, and the populations living nearby. Vigorous grassroots organizations have sprung up to resist this onslaught, the book shows, but they have been overpowered by the "minerals-energy complex". His new book, Fighting Global Neo-Extractivism, is essential reading for those seeking an up-to-date account of grassroots efforts to fight the expansion of fossil fuel production.' -Michael Klare, Hampshire College,USA

'Hundreds of locally-based social movements against fossil fuel extraction are learning, from their own experience and from each other; ways are being found to knit them together globally. The concept of environmental justice is central to these processes, Jasper Finkeldey concludes from his extensive research, which includes details studies of movements resisting coal mining and fracking projects in South Africa. This study will be of value both to researchers and activists.' - Simon Pirani, author of Burning Up: A Global History of Fossil Fuel Consumption, Honorary Professor at the University of Durham, UK