ETROD-Online dialogue with Rita Kesselring: "Swiss extractivism"
ETROD-Online dialogue with Rita Kesselring: "Swiss extractivism"
Rita Kesselring is an anthropologist and Associate Professor of Urban Studies at University of St.Gallen since August 2022. Her research is located at the interface of political, economic, legal and urban ethnology. She deals with global asymmetrical dependencies, their consequences in the Global South and the possibilities of change.
Kesselring was a guest at the University of Cape Town, University of Connecticut, Princeton University and University of the Copperbelt and senior assistant at the Department of Ethnology at the University of Basel before she came to St. Gallen.
In our ETROD Online Dialog she will talk about "Swiss extractivism":
Switzerland is usually not looked upon as a substantial economic actor in Africa. Taking Zambian copper as a case study, we show how important Swiss companies have become in the global commodities trade and the services it depends on. While big Swiss trading firms such as Glencore and Trafigura have generated increasing scholarly and public interest, a multitude of Swiss companies is involved in logistics and transport of Zambian copper. Swiss extractivism, we argue, is a model case for trends in today’s global capitalism. We highlight that servicification, a crucial element of African mining regimes today, creates new and more flexible opportunities for international companies to capture value in global production networks. These opportunities partly rely on business-friendly regulation and tax regimes in Northern countries, a fact which makes companies potentially vulnerable to reputation risks and offers opportunities to civil society actors criticising their role. New and different Swiss–Zambian connections emerge from civil society networks organising around companies’ economic activities.
For further information please visit the ZIRS website or send an email to etrod@zirs.uni-halle.de.