
AJUNTAMENT D'ALCOI
Website

Generalitat Valenciana
Website

Ayuntamiento de Valencia
Website

Cicloplast
Website

Ayuntamiento de Onil
Website

Anarpla
Website

Ayuntamiento de Mislata
Website

nlWA, North London Waste Authority
Website

Ayuntamiento de Salinas
Website

Zicla
Website

Fondazione Ecosistemi
Website

PEFC
Website

ALQUIENVAS
Website

DIPUTACI� DE VAL�NCIA
Website

AYUNTAMIENTO DE REQUENA
Website

UNIVERSIDAD DE ZARAGOZA
Website

OBSERVATORIO CONTRATACIÓN PÚBLICA
Website

AYUNTAMIENTO DE PAIPORTA
Website

AYUNTAMIENTO DE CUENCA
Website

BERL� S.A.
Website

CM PLASTIK
Website

TRANSFORMADORES INDUSTRIALES ECOL�GICOS

INDUSTRIAS AGAPITO
Website

RUBI KANGURO
Website
If you want to support our LIFE project as a STAKEHOLDER, please contact with us: life-future-project@aimplas.es
In this section, you can access to the latest technical information related to the FUTURE project topic.
Corridors of Power: Assembling US Environmental Foreign Aid
Soil surveys are one of the most powerful tools of modern statecraft, yet they have received little critical scrutiny. This article examines the early history of the US cooperative soil survey, from its founding in 1899 through the New Deal, and argues that it functioned not only as a tool of agricultural modernisation but also as a technology for the development of white nationalist state power. The founding of the soil survey, for instance, was successful based on its claims to resolve post"?frontier racial anxieties about national vigour. Over the next several decades soil surveying grew increasingly central to the execution of state power and arguably formed the basemap for New Deal conservation and planning efforts in the 1930s. The New Deal's decentralised and democratising projects promoted a more inclusive liberal nationalism, yet still supported the reproduction of white supremacy. This analysis shows how taking racial politics more seriously adds depth to studies of environmental governance, and suggests a model for doing so that highlights the articulation of race, nature, and nation through logics of improvement. Soil surveys remain an important political"?ecological technology today and deserve more critical scrutiny. Political ecologists might also work with land reform and reparations movements to determine if and how soil surveys could be useful for liberatory projects.

» Author: 2> <p>Using the US Agency for International Development's environmental program in Madagascar as a lens, I offer a historically grounded, relational, and multi"?sited methodology for understanding the transnational processes that constitute polit
» Source: Wiley
C/ Gustave Eiffel, 4
(València Parc Tecnològic) - 46980
PATERNA (Valencia) - SPAIN
(+34) 96 136 60 40
Project Management department - Sustainability and Industrial Recovery
life-future-project@aimplas.es
