This thesis examines how dispossession was produced for Anishinaabeg communities of Treaty 3 through interlocking processes of legal discourse, cultural production and development. It traces the genealogical origins of infrastructure through a series of dams built across Northwestern Ontario from 1871 until 1926. In Treaty 3, the discursive foundations for infrastructure and development were laid through a series of expeditions and legal decisions that justified and facilitated settler expansion. Likewise, development involved a set of mutually constitutive and reciprocal forms of epistemic, ontological, symbolic and material violence. In this work, I argue that dispossession is structural to settler colonialism and the defining feature whi...
This thesis was completed and submitted at Nipissing University, and is made freely accessible throu...
This dissertation examines relationships between colonialism and Indigenous peoples that shape the d...
The promised paradises of colonial capitalism and neoliberalism are set in a perpetually elusive fut...
In this dissertation, I seek to answer: what are the limits to attempts by Indigenous peoples to ar...
Taking mainland Nova Scotia and Cape Breton Island as its case studies, this thesis attempts to unco...
My dissertation mobilises the tools of critical political theory to study the processes of land appr...
In 1869-70 the Métis of the Red River region in Manitoba resisted the transfer of their homeland fro...
The province of Ontario has the largest Indigenous population in Canada, and a complicated history o...
This study examines intricately related questions of consciousness and learning, textually-mediated ...
This thesis is an exploration of Nishnaabeg geography in what is now known as Southern Ontario that ...
Despite being located within a relatively close geographic area, the Anishinaabeg of the eastern Gre...
In this paper, I center Indigenous water governance at the nexus of extractive capitalist developmen...
This study examines white settler responses to the Oka, Ipperwash, Burnt Church, and Caledonia Crise...
This article uses a decolonial framework to reveal the power of legality in the settler-colonial sta...
This dissertation analyzes tensions between Indigenous and Canadian authority over land and governan...
This thesis was completed and submitted at Nipissing University, and is made freely accessible throu...
This dissertation examines relationships between colonialism and Indigenous peoples that shape the d...
The promised paradises of colonial capitalism and neoliberalism are set in a perpetually elusive fut...
In this dissertation, I seek to answer: what are the limits to attempts by Indigenous peoples to ar...
Taking mainland Nova Scotia and Cape Breton Island as its case studies, this thesis attempts to unco...
My dissertation mobilises the tools of critical political theory to study the processes of land appr...
In 1869-70 the Métis of the Red River region in Manitoba resisted the transfer of their homeland fro...
The province of Ontario has the largest Indigenous population in Canada, and a complicated history o...
This study examines intricately related questions of consciousness and learning, textually-mediated ...
This thesis is an exploration of Nishnaabeg geography in what is now known as Southern Ontario that ...
Despite being located within a relatively close geographic area, the Anishinaabeg of the eastern Gre...
In this paper, I center Indigenous water governance at the nexus of extractive capitalist developmen...
This study examines white settler responses to the Oka, Ipperwash, Burnt Church, and Caledonia Crise...
This article uses a decolonial framework to reveal the power of legality in the settler-colonial sta...
This dissertation analyzes tensions between Indigenous and Canadian authority over land and governan...
This thesis was completed and submitted at Nipissing University, and is made freely accessible throu...
This dissertation examines relationships between colonialism and Indigenous peoples that shape the d...
The promised paradises of colonial capitalism and neoliberalism are set in a perpetually elusive fut...