Extractivism and Resistance in North Africa: In conversation with Hamza Hamouchene

Season 1, Episode 30,   Nov 11, 2020, 09:50 AM

Hamza Hamouchene has done research on extractivism, energy democracy, food sovereignty and environmental and climate justice in the North African context.

He is also the coordinator for North Africa at the Transnational Institute.

In this episode, Hamza Hamouchene discusses his report titled: Extractivism and Resistance in North Africa, which documents several cases of natural resource extraction which take the form of brutal "accumulation by dispossession," degrading environments and ecosystems through the privatisation and commodification of land and water. The report shows that these extractive activities have also been met with new waves of resistance and the entrance of new social actors onto the scene, demanding that wealth generated in resource projects be shared equitably in society. 

Are these new actors mainly motivated by environmental concerns, or are they fundamentally anti-systemic, seeking to undermine the basis of the capitalist extractive economy? Are these passing episodes of resistance, or do they represent a new development in the historical trajectory of class struggle in North Africa?