I would like to learn more about the toxicities of the local area and how the ethnographer conceptualises them. For example, I think this image and caption indicates two kinds of toxicity: the chemical shift in the waterbody caused by industrial effluents, and a toxic dynamic between industry/government/local residents, or even between late capitalism/local residents' sense of place.
There are so many factors at play in this image which the caption critically unpacks for readers. I am interested in all of them. How do environmentalists engage marginalized publics in their protests? How does industry drive governance in the classification of zoning and land-use?
What strikes me about the protest sign is the deployment of the word "Fake." I think this is what Oviya means in her discussion of legality. It also references a representational truth (through mapping) that is outside of politics.