Green extractivism in Colombia: A scoping review of impacts on indigenous rights and livelihoods and social movement and policy responses
Description
RIS files for database search files for Scoping Review, unscreened: SCOPUS, Overton, Policy Commons, and for results of manual search on Colombian govermnent websites and documents provided by research group.
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Steps to reproduce
The academic and grey literature document selection process was done in two steps, following the PRISMA methodology. We combined three database searches in SCOPUS, Policy Commons and Overton with a grey literature search using Google Scholar and government websites of the Colombian state Department of Mines and Energy. Appendix B in our published paper (linked below) contains all search strings which allow for the search to be reproduced. We manually searched the official web pages of the Colombian government, using the Spanish translation of the following terms: energy transition, clean energy, renewable energy, critical raw materials, metal mining, mineral mining, copper mining, wind/solar power, green hydrogen, indigenous rights, land rights, environmental protection, environmental standards, ILO 169, climate change adaptation, climate change mitigation. This search returned another 48 documents. The research team provided an additional 11 relevant items: two peer-reviewed articles (Alarcón, 2023; Ulloa, 2023), one book (Jaramillo, 2013), and eight grey literature documents (Barón-Cárdenas, 2020; Global Witness, 2023; Jaramillo, 2012; Pacto Ecosocial e Intercultural del Sur, 2023a, 2023b; Ramírez-Tovar & Schneider, 2023; Soler Villamizar & Moncaleano, 2022; Transnational Institute, 2023). Google Scholar search for ‘“Colombia” AND “green extractivism”’ delivered two highly relevant documents (Andreucci et al., 2023; Thema & Roa Garcia, 2023), while searching for “Colombia” on the homepage of the Journal of Political Ecology and repeating the above screening process delivered a further two documents (Banks & Schwartz, 2023; Feeney, 2023). Four documents written by and with the Wayuú indigenous people in La Guajira were included (Barney, 2022; Gobierno Nacional et al., 2023; Indepaz, 2022; Pueblo Wayúu, 2022). The final number of included documents was 34, listed in Appendix C. See Figure 1 for full search strategy and Table 1 for inclusion and exclusion criteria.