Special Section: Toxic dispossession and environmental violence in Latin America edited by Swistun, D., Lugo-Vivas, D. A. & Vélez-Torres, I.

Silent violence to the core: Environmental suffering and suffocating uncertainties in the Colombian Caribbean coal industry

Author: Diego Andrés Lugo-Vivas orcid logo (CET Academic Programs & Universidad Santo Tomás)

  • Silent violence to the core: Environmental suffering and suffocating uncertainties in the Colombian Caribbean coal industry

    Special Section: Toxic dispossession and environmental violence in Latin America edited by Swistun, D., Lugo-Vivas, D. A. & Vélez-Torres, I.

    Silent violence to the core: Environmental suffering and suffocating uncertainties in the Colombian Caribbean coal industry

    Author:

Abstract

For many, the coal industry in Colombia has been synonymous with progress, economic growth and access to education and housing opportunities on the Caribbean mining frontier. However, little has been said about the slow, dosed and silent violence that has permeated the ecological systems and human groups alike. This article argues that health and environmental damage in the Cesar mining corridor express quotidian, but no less painful and profound, forms of environmental suffering. Using notions such as toxic uncertainty, the article expands our understanding of environmental violence in a region prey to coal pollution.

Keywords: Coal extraction, Colombian Caribbean, toxic uncertainty, environmental suffering, Slow violence

How to Cite:

Lugo-Vivas, D., (2024) “Silent violence to the core: Environmental suffering and suffocating uncertainties in the Colombian Caribbean coal industry”, Journal of Political Ecology 31(1), 411–435. doi: https://doi.org/10.2458/jpe.5280

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Published on
22 May 2024
Peer Reviewed