PrefaceList of Tables and FiguresNotes on ContributorsIntroduction: Aftershocks of Extraction Peter van Dam and Marin Kuijt part 1: Retrospects 1 Groningen Transformed: the Impact of Gas Exploitation on Everyday Life in the Northeast Groningen Region Jeroen van Zanten 2 Empire and the Making of the Political Economy of Gas in the Netherlands Marin Kuijt 3 From Groningen to Limburg and Back: the Transitions from Peat to Coal and Gas in Oral History Interviews with Fuel Miners' (Grand)Children Wim de Jong, Maurice Paulissen, and Susan Hogervorst 4 The Climate of the Cold War, and Beyond Ruud van Dijk 5 Poisonous Prosperity: the Tilting Historiography of Gas Extraction Peter van Dam and Jouke Turpijn part 2: Here and Now 6 Tilting History Ineke Noordhoff 7 The Closed Gas Building: Public and Private in Parliamentary Inquiries Dirk Jan Wolffram 8 Justice and New Beginnings in Groningen? Truth, Reconciliation, and the Parliamentary Inquiry on Gas Extraction Agustín De Julio Pardo, Nienke Busscher, and Tom Postmes 9 Rural Groningen between Hinterland Sacrifice Zone and Idyll Esther Peeren part 3: Prospects 10 CodeROOD for Groningen: Radical Climate Justice Activism Bounded by Rootedness Harriët Bergman 11 The Heritagescapes of the Groningen Gas Field: Contestation and Imagination in Negotiation Gertjan Plets and Christiaan Vonk 12 Earthquake Devastation of Heritage: Spatial and Social Injustice and the Erosion of Historical Architecture Hanneke Ronnes and Wouter van Elburg 13 Windmills in the Place of Emptiness Jesse van Amelsvoort Afterword: after the Inquiry - the Politics of the Future Peter van Dam and Marin Kuijt Index.
Aftershocks of Extraction : Situating the History of Groningen Gas in the Anthropocene