In 1971, Robert Bourassa, then Premier of Quebec, launched a major hydroelectric scheme to be built 1400 km North of Montreal. Known as the "James Bay" project, the first phase included the creation of eight powerhouses, six reservoirs and the diversion of two rivers. These transformations necessarily impacted the local Cree people; a territorial agreement partly compensated them but remains controversial to this day. While northern communities overwhelmingly bear the ecological cost of the project, the bulk of James Bay energy flows south to the industrial centers of Quebec, Ontario and the U.S. The assertion then that "James Bay belongs to all the Quebecois" which was meant to ease political tensions about the project begs the q...
The Hydroelectric Project in James Bay, north of Quebec, Canada, illustrates the consequences of an ...
To date, most analyses of hydro-electric development portray the environment and Aboriginal Peoples ...
This thesis, based on my ethnographic research in Moose Factory, Ontario documents the history of Mo...
In 1971, Robert Bourassa, then Premier of Quebec, launched a major hydroelectric scheme to be built...
Examining hydro-electric development, as it occurred in northeastern Ontario, sheds a new and differ...
The views expressed herein are solely those of the author and do not necessarily refl ect those of t...
International audienceThis paper focuses on territorial recomposition in Canadian rural areas genera...
The social and environmental impacts of large-scale industrial development have had direct and exten...
Inuit communities in Canada are overwhelmingly dependent on expensive and polluting local diesel-pow...
Through an ethnographic approach, characterized by a long and inductive fieldwork, the author of thi...
This paper will focus on how the Cree have had to adapt and put in force various policies and measur...
Canada’s west coast has been a hotspot of environmental conflict, most recently in defense of climat...
Drawing on Timothy Mitchell’s Carbon Democracy, and using envirotechnical analysis, we probe how the...
Although there has been a tremendous amount of past and future development in the James Bay region o...
The matter of native land rights is making Canadian head lines. This issue has been stated in the Pr...
The Hydroelectric Project in James Bay, north of Quebec, Canada, illustrates the consequences of an ...
To date, most analyses of hydro-electric development portray the environment and Aboriginal Peoples ...
This thesis, based on my ethnographic research in Moose Factory, Ontario documents the history of Mo...
In 1971, Robert Bourassa, then Premier of Quebec, launched a major hydroelectric scheme to be built...
Examining hydro-electric development, as it occurred in northeastern Ontario, sheds a new and differ...
The views expressed herein are solely those of the author and do not necessarily refl ect those of t...
International audienceThis paper focuses on territorial recomposition in Canadian rural areas genera...
The social and environmental impacts of large-scale industrial development have had direct and exten...
Inuit communities in Canada are overwhelmingly dependent on expensive and polluting local diesel-pow...
Through an ethnographic approach, characterized by a long and inductive fieldwork, the author of thi...
This paper will focus on how the Cree have had to adapt and put in force various policies and measur...
Canada’s west coast has been a hotspot of environmental conflict, most recently in defense of climat...
Drawing on Timothy Mitchell’s Carbon Democracy, and using envirotechnical analysis, we probe how the...
Although there has been a tremendous amount of past and future development in the James Bay region o...
The matter of native land rights is making Canadian head lines. This issue has been stated in the Pr...
The Hydroelectric Project in James Bay, north of Quebec, Canada, illustrates the consequences of an ...
To date, most analyses of hydro-electric development portray the environment and Aboriginal Peoples ...
This thesis, based on my ethnographic research in Moose Factory, Ontario documents the history of Mo...