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Event

Extraction and Exploitation: The Effects of Mining on Religious Communities

Event Date:

July 29, 2022 | 12:00 PM EDT TO 1:30 PM EDT
Participants:
Llama
English

Project

Alpaqueros

How is climate change harming alpaca breeders in the Peruvian Andes?

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Multiple Authors
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A large white truck drives through a yellow tunnel at the base of snow-dusted mountains.
United States, 2022.

Throughout his career, Alessandro Cinque’s photographs have documented the devastating impact of extractive practices on local communities as well as the effects of climate change on Indigenous peoples and their lands. He has covered everything from gold mining in Senegal to abandoned uranium mines on Navajo land with his camera’s gaze on people as well as place.

With support from the Pulitzer Center, Cinque and fellow Pulitzer Center grantee and journalist Vidal Merma Maccarcco have been working among Peruvian communities in the Andes. The two captured what mining pollution and climate change do to people, crops, and animals.

This event will bring together Cinque and Merma to share their reporting on the effects of extractive industries on the cultural and religious practices of communities in Peru. Katherine Marshall, a senior fellow at the Berkley Center, will moderate the discussion.

This event is co-sponsored by Georgetown University’s Berkley Center for Religion, Peace and World Affairs and the Georgetown Americas Institute in collaboration with the Pulitzer Center.

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