Fuelling toxic relations: Oil sands and settler colonialism in Canada
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/22774Date
2021-08-01Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Gross, LenaAbstract
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.
Publisher
WileyCitation
Gross. Fuelling toxic relations: Oil sands and settler colonialism in Canada. Anthropology Today. 2021Metadata
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