Negotiated spaces : work, home and relationships in the Dene diamond economy

This thesis examines Dene engagement with the diamond mining economy in Canada’s Northwest Territories. While historic treaties, policy and regulation create situations of powerlessness, the space for the negotiation of a bilateral relationship between Treaty mining companies and communities exists,...

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Main Author: Gibson, Virginia Valerie
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/800
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spelling ftcanadathes:oai:collectionscanada.gc.ca:BVAU./800 2023-05-15T16:17:11+02:00 Negotiated spaces : work, home and relationships in the Dene diamond economy Gibson, Virginia Valerie 2008-05-05T15:20:15Z 1634961 bytes application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/2429/800 eng eng University of British Columbia http://hdl.handle.net/2429/800 Mining First Nations Yellowknives Dene community Electronic Thesis or Dissertation 2008 ftcanadathes 2013-11-23T21:51:48Z This thesis examines Dene engagement with the diamond mining economy in Canada’s Northwest Territories. While historic treaties, policy and regulation create situations of powerlessness, the space for the negotiation of a bilateral relationship between Treaty mining companies and communities exists, formalized as Impact and Benefit Agreements. An initial emphasis on socio-cultural impacts and vulnerability of the communities in relation to the mines illuminated variable outcomes. This led to a central focus on how outcomes are negotiated, with the outcomes strongly related to forms of community and cultural resilience. Surprisingly, the ability to bounce back, or be resilient (not vulnerable), as defined by the Tåîchô and Yellowknives Dene communities is central to community response and well being in this new economy. The possibility of self determination and the potential to be in relationships of reciprocity are found to be fundamental drivers of community health and thus resilience. Study of the Tåîchô Cosmology surfaces the centrality of reciprocity to cultural resilience wherein the quality and nature of the relationships as inscribed in past and present agreements themselves are of defining importance. New relationships with mining companies are entered with the expectation of reciprocity by communities, so that the exchanges are economic, social, cultural, spiritual and symbolic. This thesis outlines this process as it plays out in the mining economy and as it is manifest in spaces of negotiation, each of which invokes social capital and reciprocity. These include negotiations between: diamond mining companies and the communities; government and communities; diamond mining companies and the workers, and miners and their families and communities. Each of these negotiations is vital in creating the possibility of employment and business. However, relationships with the settler government and with Treaty mining companies are constrained. Many of the limitations identified relate to the assumption by settler society of the universality of their particular values, practices and culture. The thesis argues that Treaty mining companies can shift approaches, both in the orientation to relationship and in the implementation of agreements through the lifecycle of the mine. Thesis First Nations Northwest Territories Theses Canada/Thèses Canada (Library and Archives Canada) Northwest Territories
institution Open Polar
collection Theses Canada/Thèses Canada (Library and Archives Canada)
op_collection_id ftcanadathes
language English
topic Mining
First Nations
Yellowknives Dene community
spellingShingle Mining
First Nations
Yellowknives Dene community
Gibson, Virginia Valerie
Negotiated spaces : work, home and relationships in the Dene diamond economy
topic_facet Mining
First Nations
Yellowknives Dene community
description This thesis examines Dene engagement with the diamond mining economy in Canada’s Northwest Territories. While historic treaties, policy and regulation create situations of powerlessness, the space for the negotiation of a bilateral relationship between Treaty mining companies and communities exists, formalized as Impact and Benefit Agreements. An initial emphasis on socio-cultural impacts and vulnerability of the communities in relation to the mines illuminated variable outcomes. This led to a central focus on how outcomes are negotiated, with the outcomes strongly related to forms of community and cultural resilience. Surprisingly, the ability to bounce back, or be resilient (not vulnerable), as defined by the Tåîchô and Yellowknives Dene communities is central to community response and well being in this new economy. The possibility of self determination and the potential to be in relationships of reciprocity are found to be fundamental drivers of community health and thus resilience. Study of the Tåîchô Cosmology surfaces the centrality of reciprocity to cultural resilience wherein the quality and nature of the relationships as inscribed in past and present agreements themselves are of defining importance. New relationships with mining companies are entered with the expectation of reciprocity by communities, so that the exchanges are economic, social, cultural, spiritual and symbolic. This thesis outlines this process as it plays out in the mining economy and as it is manifest in spaces of negotiation, each of which invokes social capital and reciprocity. These include negotiations between: diamond mining companies and the communities; government and communities; diamond mining companies and the workers, and miners and their families and communities. Each of these negotiations is vital in creating the possibility of employment and business. However, relationships with the settler government and with Treaty mining companies are constrained. Many of the limitations identified relate to the assumption by settler society of the universality of their particular values, practices and culture. The thesis argues that Treaty mining companies can shift approaches, both in the orientation to relationship and in the implementation of agreements through the lifecycle of the mine.
format Thesis
author Gibson, Virginia Valerie
author_facet Gibson, Virginia Valerie
author_sort Gibson, Virginia Valerie
title Negotiated spaces : work, home and relationships in the Dene diamond economy
title_short Negotiated spaces : work, home and relationships in the Dene diamond economy
title_full Negotiated spaces : work, home and relationships in the Dene diamond economy
title_fullStr Negotiated spaces : work, home and relationships in the Dene diamond economy
title_full_unstemmed Negotiated spaces : work, home and relationships in the Dene diamond economy
title_sort negotiated spaces : work, home and relationships in the dene diamond economy
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/800
geographic Northwest Territories
geographic_facet Northwest Territories
genre First Nations
Northwest Territories
genre_facet First Nations
Northwest Territories
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/800
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