Español
Español
Keywords:
EspañolAbstract
This article explores, theoretically and empirically, the possibilities of understanding the territory as a horizon for action and not only as a given reality. This turn involves addressing how different social actors organize their actions on "the same territory" without considering "the same territory" as the object of those actions. Using as a case study the new Chilean energy policy that, in less than a decade, left aside the mega-projects of reservoirs privileging the run-of-river power plants, we describe the activation of a new geography of economic interest in the mountain range of the center-south of Chile. A temporal analysis describes three periods differentiated by a clear productive-technological orientation of the projects. On the other hand, a territorial analysis shows how the technical model, of large reservoir plants and small run-of-river plants, describes new, extended and saturated, territoriality in the Chilean central-south Andes. Thus, we propose that the creation of new territorialities of economic interest will be at the base of many contemporary socio-environmental conflicts where the territorial horizons of action for different social actors are divergent.
Downloads
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2022 Revista de Geografía Norte Grande
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.