How does the often-invisible nature of pollution affect people's physical health and psychosocial relations, and their well-being near major industrial projects? Based on long-term ethnographic fieldwork in Northern Alberta, Canada, this article explores this question by focusing on oil sands extraction on Cree, Dené and Métis nations' homelands with its environmental and socio-cultural consequences. Looking at different forms of dispossessions and Indigenous concepts of relationality and home, the author argues that pollution should be seen as an act of settler violence instead of merely a by-product of industry
Visual practices of representing fossil fuel projects are entangled in diverse values and relations ...
Scientists working for oil companies in the Athabasca region are developing methods by which to recl...
For 14 weeks, from May 8th to August 15th of 2015, I lived and conducted research in Peerless Trout ...
How does the often-invisible nature of pollution affect people's physical health and psychosocial re...
This dissertation is an exploration of sakâwiyiniwak (Northern Bush Cree) experiences with wild or '...
Alberta’s oil sands constitute one of the largest and most contentious industrial extraction sites o...
This research study explores how pollution from surrounding petro-chemical industry affects how abor...
This work critically analyzes the role of extractive industry in the continued colonization of Indig...
Within the Peace River Oil Sands patch of Alberta, Canada, white settlers actively avoid awareness o...
This dissertation examines how tar-sands extraction comes to be seen as normal and an inevitable con...
When considering the ways in which resource acquisition adversely impacts the land and environment, ...
In this paper we discuss the impact of the tar sands development in northern Alberta on the indigeno...
This article approaches contemporary extractivism as an environmentally and socially destructive ext...
The winter of 2020 was dominated by Canadian and international news coverage about a group of indige...
In 2002, the Athabasca tar sands in Alberta were re-classified as recoverable. This recovery require...
Visual practices of representing fossil fuel projects are entangled in diverse values and relations ...
Scientists working for oil companies in the Athabasca region are developing methods by which to recl...
For 14 weeks, from May 8th to August 15th of 2015, I lived and conducted research in Peerless Trout ...
How does the often-invisible nature of pollution affect people's physical health and psychosocial re...
This dissertation is an exploration of sakâwiyiniwak (Northern Bush Cree) experiences with wild or '...
Alberta’s oil sands constitute one of the largest and most contentious industrial extraction sites o...
This research study explores how pollution from surrounding petro-chemical industry affects how abor...
This work critically analyzes the role of extractive industry in the continued colonization of Indig...
Within the Peace River Oil Sands patch of Alberta, Canada, white settlers actively avoid awareness o...
This dissertation examines how tar-sands extraction comes to be seen as normal and an inevitable con...
When considering the ways in which resource acquisition adversely impacts the land and environment, ...
In this paper we discuss the impact of the tar sands development in northern Alberta on the indigeno...
This article approaches contemporary extractivism as an environmentally and socially destructive ext...
The winter of 2020 was dominated by Canadian and international news coverage about a group of indige...
In 2002, the Athabasca tar sands in Alberta were re-classified as recoverable. This recovery require...
Visual practices of representing fossil fuel projects are entangled in diverse values and relations ...
Scientists working for oil companies in the Athabasca region are developing methods by which to recl...
For 14 weeks, from May 8th to August 15th of 2015, I lived and conducted research in Peerless Trout ...