1st Edition

The Political Economy of State Reaching Remote Areas, Expansion, and Territorial Reorganization

Edited By Gabriel Espinoza-Rivera, Juan Carlos Skewes Copyright 2027
220 Pages 37 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

The book examines how contemporary states confront financial turmoil and weakened autonomy while crafting strategies to consolidate power and sustain development within their territories. Using Reach as its lens, the book traces how state expansion and private capital interact across diverse regions and territorial settings. This book spans themes such as animal ecology, tourism studies,... Read more

Introduction 0. Reaching: The Political Economy of Contemporary State Articulations PART I: Foundations 1. Measuring Distances, Patterns and Dangers: Species and Their Place in Space 2. Political Ecology and Community Memory of Azorella Compacta in Northern Chile: A Commodity on the Margins of the State 3. Persisting in the "Medanada": Governmentality and Governance Processes in Northeastern Mendoza, Argentina PART II: Repossessions 4. The End of Your Road Is My Backyard: Temporally Disjointed Road Infrastructure in the Western Canadian Arctic 5. Beyond the "Great White Nothing": Resourcefulness in Northern Infrastructural Landscapes 6. Connected Remoteness: Ski Resorts and the Politics of Alpine Space PART III: Deadlocks 7. Unreachable Vertical Space: Condo-Ization, Urban Governance and Remoteness Amongst High-Rise Condominiums in Santiago de Chile 8. Sky Tourism: Reaching Inland to Unpolluted Atmospheres in Australia 9. State Reach Anxiety as a Response in the Face of Digital Remoteness Epilogue: Remote Intimacies: The Vast Astronomical Distances of Outer Space

Biography

Gabriel Espinoza-Rivera is an independent researcher whose focus is on political economy with a focus on urban studies and territorial development. His work has been published in Political Geography, City Analysis of Urban Change, Theory, Action, Urban Geography, Bitacora Urbano Territorial,  Revista de Urbanismo, among others.

Juan Carlos Skewes is a Professor at the Anthropology Department of Alberto Hurtado University, Santiago de Chile. His work spanned for more than 4 decades and it has been carried out in peripheral areas in both the urban, rural and indigenous world. His approach privileges spatial designs, materialities and local practices in relation to the capital’s expansion, dispossession, and State control.