Huber, M. (2018). Resource geography II: What makes resources political?. Progress in Human Geography,
What makes resources political? We often imagine that politics is something done to resources (i.e. larger
contestations over access to and control over resources). In this second “progress report”, I question
whether resource politics is simply about fighting over stuff. How does the materiality of resources them-
selves shape broader conceptions of “the political” in general? I highlight the role of resources in shaping
three central meanings of the political or politics. First, the commonsense ideology of politics as electoral
contests over political power. Second, the state – as the sphere of “the political” – is constructed as a
geographical entity based on a specific form of territoriality. Third, the nation-state reflects a complex
political duality: both an institutional state apparatus and a cultural imaginary of shared nationhood. I conclude
with some thoughts on the need to expand the terrain of the political in resource geography.