In this paper we discuss the impact of the tar sands development in northern Alberta on the indigenous communities of the Treaty 8 region.[i] While the project has brought income to some, and wealth to the few, its impact on the environment and on the lives of many indigenous groups is profoundly concerning. Their ability to hunt, trap and fish has been severely curtailed and, where it is possible, people are often too fearful of toxins to drink water and eat fish from waterways polluted by the ‘externalities’ of tar sands production. The situation has led some indigenous spokespersons to talk in terms of a slow industrial genocide being perpetrated against them. We begin the paper with a discussion of the treaty negotiations which paved th...
In this in-depth analysis of First Nations opposition to the oil sands industry, James Heydon offers...
Energy extraction in western Canada has impacts on global climate, local ecologies, human health and...
Crude oil is an essential resource for the world. About 40% of the world’s total supply of energy, a...
In this opinion piece, independent researcher Jennifer Huseman and Senior Lecturer in Human Rights i...
Alberta’s oil sands constitute one of the largest and most contentious industrial extraction sites o...
Using theoretical frameworks from Indigenous scholars Dr. Anne Spice and Dr. Kyle Whyte, this paper ...
Oil and gas extraction has transformed Anishinaabe society in ways that undermine the consensual, ho...
For 14 weeks, from May 8th to August 15th of 2015, I lived and conducted research in Peerless Trout ...
The thesis considers the expansive interpretation of established human rights law from the provincia...
One of the most pressing and polarizing issues in Western Canada today, and for many First Nations g...
This dissertation examines how tar-sands extraction comes to be seen as normal and an inevitable con...
This thesis shows that oil price increases and supply threats associated with the Cold War and the O...
In 2002, the Athabasca tar sands in Alberta were re-classified as recoverable. This recovery require...
How does the often-invisible nature of pollution affect people's physical health and psychosocial re...
This work critically analyzes the role of extractive industry in the continued colonization of Indig...
In this in-depth analysis of First Nations opposition to the oil sands industry, James Heydon offers...
Energy extraction in western Canada has impacts on global climate, local ecologies, human health and...
Crude oil is an essential resource for the world. About 40% of the world’s total supply of energy, a...
In this opinion piece, independent researcher Jennifer Huseman and Senior Lecturer in Human Rights i...
Alberta’s oil sands constitute one of the largest and most contentious industrial extraction sites o...
Using theoretical frameworks from Indigenous scholars Dr. Anne Spice and Dr. Kyle Whyte, this paper ...
Oil and gas extraction has transformed Anishinaabe society in ways that undermine the consensual, ho...
For 14 weeks, from May 8th to August 15th of 2015, I lived and conducted research in Peerless Trout ...
The thesis considers the expansive interpretation of established human rights law from the provincia...
One of the most pressing and polarizing issues in Western Canada today, and for many First Nations g...
This dissertation examines how tar-sands extraction comes to be seen as normal and an inevitable con...
This thesis shows that oil price increases and supply threats associated with the Cold War and the O...
In 2002, the Athabasca tar sands in Alberta were re-classified as recoverable. This recovery require...
How does the often-invisible nature of pollution affect people's physical health and psychosocial re...
This work critically analyzes the role of extractive industry in the continued colonization of Indig...
In this in-depth analysis of First Nations opposition to the oil sands industry, James Heydon offers...
Energy extraction in western Canada has impacts on global climate, local ecologies, human health and...
Crude oil is an essential resource for the world. About 40% of the world’s total supply of energy, a...