Journal article
Adaptation sovereignty: situated responses to environmental change
- Abstract:
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This paper investigates Indigenous illegal artisanal and small-scale gold mining (ASGM) and its motivations in Madre de Dios, Peru, through the lens of resource sovereignty and adaptation. It proposes and applies a new framework of adaptation sovereignty to examine responses to socio-environmental change — in this case, change caused by ASGM on Indigenous territories conducted by external, non-Indigenous miners. This study addresses a critical gap in the literature regarding Indigenous communities who experience external ASGM on their lands while engaging in the same activity.
The authors draw on semi-structured interviews, informal discussions, participant observation, and observations of mining activities in three Indigenous communities to illustrate how Indigenous community ASGM emerges as a strategy rooted in self-determination and territorial presence, enabling communities to remain on their lands despite disruptions to traditional livelihoods caused by external ASGM. It argues that ASGM functions as both a survival strategy and an enactment of territorial belonging and authority under constrained and contested conditions.
This paper responds to calls for a better understanding of the motivations underlying illegal ASGM in the Amazon rainforest. It introduces adaptation sovereignty as a conceptual framework that centres sovereignty while making analytically visible contradictions of adaptation, including the tension between ASGM as a means of maintaining community presence and its role in degrading the ecological conditions that support that presence. The paper further examines community aspirations for a better future and analyses how external interventions and conceptions of Indigeneity shape the possibilities, limits, and repercussions of adaptation sovereignty.
- Publication status:
- Published
- Peer review status:
- Peer reviewed
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(Preview, Version of record, pdf, 1.3MB, Terms of use)
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- Publisher copy:
- 10.1016/j.geoforum.2026.104664
Authors
+ Royal Geographical Society
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- Funder identifier:
- https://ror.org/03k7szx23
- Grant:
- FSPA 08.24
+ Environmental Change Institute, University of Oxford
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- Funder identifier:
- https://ror.org/052gg0110
- Publisher:
- Elsevier
- Journal:
- Geoforum More from this journal
- Volume:
- 174
- Article number:
- 104664
- Publication date:
- 2026-04-30
- Acceptance date:
- 2026-04-10
- DOI:
- EISSN:
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1872-9398
- ISSN:
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0016-7185
- Language:
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English
- Keywords:
- Pubs id:
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2430016
- Local pid:
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pubs:2430016
- Source identifiers:
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W7160033616
- Deposit date:
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2026-06-05
- ARK identifier:
Terms of use
- Copyright holder:
- Easton-Calabria et al.
- Copyright date:
- 2026
- Rights statement:
- © 2026 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
- Licence:
- CC Attribution (CC BY)
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