TY - BOOK ID - 58818329 TI - Rare Earth Frontiers : From Terrestrial Subsoils to Lunar Landscapes PY - 2017 SN - 9781501714610 1501714619 9781501714603 1501714600 9781501714580 1501714589 9781501714597 1501714597 PB - Ithaca : Cornell University Press, DB - UniCat KW - Lunar mining. KW - Rare earth metals KW - Political aspects. KW - Social aspects. KW - Mining, Lunar KW - Mining of lunar resources KW - Space mining KW - Lanthanide series KW - Lanthanides KW - Lanthanoid series KW - Lanthanons KW - Rare earth elements KW - Nonferrous metals UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:58818329 AB - Rare Earth Frontiers is a work of human geography that serves to demystify the powerful elements that make possible the miniaturization of electronics, green energy and medical technologies, and essential telecommunications and defense systems. Julie Michelle Klinger draws attention to the fact that the rare earths we rely on most are as common as copper or lead, and this means the implications of their extraction are global. Klinger excavates the rich historical origins and ongoing ramifications of the quest to mine rare earths in ever more impossible places. Klinger writes about the devastating damage to lives and the environment caused by the exploitation of rare earths. She demonstrates in human terms how scarcity myths have been conscripted into diverse geopolitical campaigns that use rare earth mining as a pretext to capture spaces that have historically fallen beyond the grasp of centralized power. These include legally and logistically forbidding locations in the Amazon, Greenland, and Afghanistan, and on the Moon. Drawing on ethnographic, archival, and interview data gathered in local languages and offering possible solutions to the problems it documents, this book examines the production of the rare earth frontier as a place, a concept, and a zone of contestation, sacrifice, and transformation. ER -