Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Dayna Scott employs the concept of networked infrastructures drawn from the literature in critical geography to reveal the environmental justice implications of the coast-to-coast crude oil network that is currently being contemplated in Canada. Her talk was delivered on January 30, 2013 as part of the Osgoode Faculty Research Seminar Series
The increase of Bakken oil extraction and production in the United States in the last decade has spa...
We employ infrastructuring as a verb to highlight contested processes of infrastructure expansion to...
This historically and critically informed dissertation investigates the question why Canada has beco...
Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Dayna Scott employs the concept of networked infrastructures dra...
A read of the critical geography literature on the concept of “networked infrastructures” generates ...
Mentioned/quoted: Professor Dayna Scott & Environmental Justice and Sustainability Clini
The winter of 2020 was dominated by Canadian and international news coverage about a group of indige...
Rapidly rising carbon emissions from the intense development of Western Canada’s fossil fuels contin...
This paper builds on the work of critical environmental justice scholars. I argue that the understan...
Presented at the Environmental justice in the Anthropocene symposium held on April 24-25, 2017 at th...
In Canada, there are currently multiple oil pipeline projects being proposed, engaged in the regulat...
To fight against the climate crisis and global warming, the decreased usage of fossil fuel in Canada...
Environmental lawyer Eugene Kung joins Below the Radar’s Climate Justice & Inequality series to ...
Environmental lawyer Eugene Kung joins Below the Radar’s Climate Justice & Inequality series to ...
Economic and political pressures to extract Canada’s oil sands—among the most carbon-intensive and p...
The increase of Bakken oil extraction and production in the United States in the last decade has spa...
We employ infrastructuring as a verb to highlight contested processes of infrastructure expansion to...
This historically and critically informed dissertation investigates the question why Canada has beco...
Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Dayna Scott employs the concept of networked infrastructures dra...
A read of the critical geography literature on the concept of “networked infrastructures” generates ...
Mentioned/quoted: Professor Dayna Scott & Environmental Justice and Sustainability Clini
The winter of 2020 was dominated by Canadian and international news coverage about a group of indige...
Rapidly rising carbon emissions from the intense development of Western Canada’s fossil fuels contin...
This paper builds on the work of critical environmental justice scholars. I argue that the understan...
Presented at the Environmental justice in the Anthropocene symposium held on April 24-25, 2017 at th...
In Canada, there are currently multiple oil pipeline projects being proposed, engaged in the regulat...
To fight against the climate crisis and global warming, the decreased usage of fossil fuel in Canada...
Environmental lawyer Eugene Kung joins Below the Radar’s Climate Justice & Inequality series to ...
Environmental lawyer Eugene Kung joins Below the Radar’s Climate Justice & Inequality series to ...
Economic and political pressures to extract Canada’s oil sands—among the most carbon-intensive and p...
The increase of Bakken oil extraction and production in the United States in the last decade has spa...
We employ infrastructuring as a verb to highlight contested processes of infrastructure expansion to...
This historically and critically informed dissertation investigates the question why Canada has beco...