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Expansión y Profundización: La Urbanización Planetaria y Las Dimensiones, Direcciones y Escalas Actuales del Extractivismo y el Colonialismo en América Latina

  • Claudia Lucía Rojas-Bernal
  • , Sandra Vivas Botero
  • , Mónica Rivera-Muñoz
  • , Ileana Rodríguez-Bonilla

Producción científica: Contribución a una revistaArtículorevisión exhaustiva

Resumen

The critical role of non-urban landscapes as the invisible infrastructure of urbanization has been historically overlooked, while their resources have been absorbed as seemingly “limitless” flows, without acknowledging the socio-environmental conflicts generated by their extraction. This article examines the transformation of the lower Cesar River basin (Colombia) to critically assess these processes in Latin America. Drawing on planetary urbanization theory, it incorporates a diachronic reading of the territory based on environmental history. Through archival research, literature review, and interpretive cartography, the study reconstructs its historical trajectory from the eighteenth century to the present through four productive phases: the clearing of tropical dry forest and the introduction of cattle ranching, the technified production of cotton, the agro-industry of oil palm, and large-scale coal mining. The findings offer three main contributions. First, they present a postcolonial reading of planetary urbanization, framing it as the cumulative result of successive extractive phases articulated to metropolitan demands since the colonial period, rather than solely as a phenomenon of contemporary global capitalism. Second, they show how extraction networks imposed a universalizing vision of the territory, marginalizing local epistemologies and degrading strategic ecosystems. Third, they reveal the persistence of the center–periphery dynamic, as each phase reconfigured the relationships between non-urban landscapes and cities, transforming the territory to meet external demands without fully integrating it into urban morphological or socioeconomic logics, thus challenging the idea of a complete homogenization of the urban. The analysis highlights how colonial processes of dispossession laid the groundwork for today’s global extractive networks. These results are relevant to global debates on environmental justice, energy transitions, and the role of peripheries in the urbanization of the Anthropocene.

Título traducido de la contribuciónExpanding and Deepening: Planetary Urbanization and Today’s Dimensions, Directions and Scales of Extractivism and Colonialism in Latin America
Idioma originalEspañol
Páginas (desde-hasta)127-158
Número de páginas32
PublicaciónHistoria Ambiental Latinoamericana y Caribena
Volumen15
N.º3
DOI
EstadoPublicada - 10 dic. 2025
Publicado de forma externa

Nota bibliográfica

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025, Centro Universitario de Anapolis. All rights reserved.

ODS de las Naciones Unidas

Este resultado contribuye a los siguientes Objetivos de Desarrollo Sostenible

  1. ODS 11: Ciudades y comunidades sostenibles
    ODS 11: Ciudades y comunidades sostenibles

Palabras clave

  • colonial extractivism
  • peripheral landscapes
  • planetary urbanization

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