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Grassroots Special Section: 'Colonialities of climate change and action' edited by N. De la Hoz, D. Silva-Garzón, N. Hernández-Vidal, L. Gutiérrez-Escobar, M. Hasenfratz, & B. Fladvad

Oil and gas corporations as anti-racist decolonial liberators? A case study of propaganda from the struggle against Shell in South Africa

Author: Alex Lenferna orcid logo (Nelson Mandela University)

  • Oil and gas corporations as anti-racist decolonial liberators? A case study of propaganda from the struggle against Shell in South Africa

    Grassroots Special Section: 'Colonialities of climate change and action' edited by N. De la Hoz, D. Silva-Garzón, N. Hernández-Vidal, L. Gutiérrez-Escobar, M. Hasenfratz, & B. Fladvad

    Oil and gas corporations as anti-racist decolonial liberators? A case study of propaganda from the struggle against Shell in South Africa

    Author:

Abstract

Oil and gas corporations and their lobbyists are increasingly appropriating the language of racial justice, anti-imperialism, and decolonization to block climate action and advance a polluting, extractive, and neocolonial agenda. This article argues that these appropriations are a form of propaganda called 'undermining demagoguery', which serves to subvert the very ideals it claims to uphold. Shell's attempt to explore for oil and gas off the Wild Coast of South Africa is used as a case study. The article shows how such propaganda efforts are becoming increasingly prevalent and recommends strategies that can be used to counteract them.

Keywords: climate justice, oil and gas, propaganda, racial justice, decolonization, anti-imperialism, Shell, South Africa

How to Cite:

Lenferna, A., (2024) “Oil and gas corporations as anti-racist decolonial liberators? A case study of propaganda from the struggle against Shell in South Africa”, Journal of Political Ecology 31(1), 678–689. doi: https://doi.org/10.2458/jpe.5667

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Funding

Name
National Institute for the Humanities and Social Sciences
Name
National Research Foundation of South Africa
Funding ID
99188

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Published on
2024-02-03

Peer Reviewed