Ozen, HayriyeOzen, SukruDepartment of Public Administration and Political Science2024-07-052024-07-05201860016-71851872-939810.1016/j.geoforum.2017.11.0022-s2.0-85034232050https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoforum.2017.11.002https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14411/3015Özen, Sukru/0000-0003-3618-3171; Ozen, Hayriye/0000-0001-5476-176XIt is widely known that many local environmental mobilizations against resource extraction projects of trans national capital have been repressed by the use of the state force in the late-industrializing world. What is less known is the aftermath of these repressions. Do they conceal all the traces of these mobilizations and lead to naturalization of the extractive operations of transnational capital at the local spaces? We address this question by examining two subsequent local environmental mobilizations in Turkey against gold-mining MNCs. Drawing on Laclauian insights on political struggles and hegemony, we first conceptualize repression of dissent not only as the repression of dissidents or protesters, but also that of protest discourse. Then, we argue that the forceful repression of the actors of those mobilizations succeeding to articulate an appealing protest discourse can make the hegemony and domination of transnational capital at the local level highly fragile, thus providing the conditions of possibility of subsequent similar mobilizations. The protest discourse constituted through such mobilizations may sediment despite the repression of protesters and become highly influential on the discursive trajectory of subsequent mobilizations. Yet, such an influence, as we also demonstrate in this study, may not only enable subsequent movements, but also limit their hegemonic capabilities.eninfo:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccessRepressionHegemonic contestationProtest discourseLocal mobilizationsMNCsGold-miningWhat comes after repression? The hegemonic contestation in the gold-mining field in TurkeyArticleQ28819WOS:000427212800001