“…In turn, this may result in overlapping territorialities, defined as 'the use and control of territory for political, social and economic ends', undertaken and contested by diverse actors with claims to the same spatial area, including the state but also civil society and other actors (Agnew & Oslender, 2013, p. 123). Highlighting the unstable nature of the state's authority where territorial struggles occur (López, 2019), this reinforces the notion that, within a given territory, '[m]ultiple spatial relationships and relational constructions of power are produced' (Clare et al, 2018, p. 306). In this sense, then, power is central to territorial processes, as part of social relations that produce territory (Fernandes, 2005, cited in Halvorsen et al, 2019, p. 1455; see also Zibechi, 2008).…”