Indigenous ExtrACTIVISM in Boreal Canada: Colonial Legacies, Contemporary Struggles and Sovereign Futures

This article approaches contemporary extractivism as an environmentally and socially destructive extension of an enduring colonial societal structure. Manifested in massive hydroelectric developments, clearcut logging, mining, and unconventional oil and gas production, extractivism removes natural r...

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Published in:Humanities
Main Author: Anna Willow
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3390/h5030055
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author Anna Willow
author_facet Anna Willow
author_sort Anna Willow
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container_start_page 55
container_title Humanities
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description This article approaches contemporary extractivism as an environmentally and socially destructive extension of an enduring colonial societal structure. Manifested in massive hydroelectric developments, clearcut logging, mining, and unconventional oil and gas production, extractivism removes natural resources from their points of origin and dislocates the emplaced benefits they provide. Because externally imposed resource extraction threatens Indigenous peoples’ land-based self-determination, industrial sites often become contested, politicized landscapes. Consequently, I also illuminate the struggles of those who strive to turn dreams for sovereign futures into reality through extrACTIVIST resistance to extractivist schemes. Presenting four case synopses—from across Canada’s boreal forest and spanning a broad range of extractive undertakings—that highlight both sides of the extractivism/ACTIVISM formulation, this article exposes the political roots of resource-related conflicts and contributes to an emerging comparative political ecology of settler colonialism. While extractivism’s environmental effects are immediate and arresting, these physical transformations have significant cultural consequences that are underlain by profound political inequities. I ultimately suggest that because extractivism is colonial in its causal logic, effective opposition cannot emerge from environmentalism alone, but will instead arise from movements that pose systemic challenges to conjoined processes of social, economic, and environmental injustice.
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spelling ftmdpi:oai:mdpi.com:/2076-0787/5/3/55/ 2025-01-16T21:56:24+00:00 Indigenous ExtrACTIVISM in Boreal Canada: Colonial Legacies, Contemporary Struggles and Sovereign Futures Anna Willow 2016-07-15 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.3390/h5030055 EN eng Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/h5030055 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Humanities; Volume 5; Issue 3; Pages: 55 activism Canada clearcutting extractivism First Nations hydroelectric development mining natural resource conflicts settler colonialism tar sands Text 2016 ftmdpi https://doi.org/10.3390/h5030055 2023-07-31T20:55:09Z This article approaches contemporary extractivism as an environmentally and socially destructive extension of an enduring colonial societal structure. Manifested in massive hydroelectric developments, clearcut logging, mining, and unconventional oil and gas production, extractivism removes natural resources from their points of origin and dislocates the emplaced benefits they provide. Because externally imposed resource extraction threatens Indigenous peoples’ land-based self-determination, industrial sites often become contested, politicized landscapes. Consequently, I also illuminate the struggles of those who strive to turn dreams for sovereign futures into reality through extrACTIVIST resistance to extractivist schemes. Presenting four case synopses—from across Canada’s boreal forest and spanning a broad range of extractive undertakings—that highlight both sides of the extractivism/ACTIVISM formulation, this article exposes the political roots of resource-related conflicts and contributes to an emerging comparative political ecology of settler colonialism. While extractivism’s environmental effects are immediate and arresting, these physical transformations have significant cultural consequences that are underlain by profound political inequities. I ultimately suggest that because extractivism is colonial in its causal logic, effective opposition cannot emerge from environmentalism alone, but will instead arise from movements that pose systemic challenges to conjoined processes of social, economic, and environmental injustice. Text First Nations MDPI Open Access Publishing Canada Humanities 5 3 55
spellingShingle activism
Canada
clearcutting
extractivism
First Nations
hydroelectric development
mining
natural resource conflicts
settler colonialism
tar sands
Anna Willow
Indigenous ExtrACTIVISM in Boreal Canada: Colonial Legacies, Contemporary Struggles and Sovereign Futures
title Indigenous ExtrACTIVISM in Boreal Canada: Colonial Legacies, Contemporary Struggles and Sovereign Futures
title_full Indigenous ExtrACTIVISM in Boreal Canada: Colonial Legacies, Contemporary Struggles and Sovereign Futures
title_fullStr Indigenous ExtrACTIVISM in Boreal Canada: Colonial Legacies, Contemporary Struggles and Sovereign Futures
title_full_unstemmed Indigenous ExtrACTIVISM in Boreal Canada: Colonial Legacies, Contemporary Struggles and Sovereign Futures
title_short Indigenous ExtrACTIVISM in Boreal Canada: Colonial Legacies, Contemporary Struggles and Sovereign Futures
title_sort indigenous extractivism in boreal canada: colonial legacies, contemporary struggles and sovereign futures
topic activism
Canada
clearcutting
extractivism
First Nations
hydroelectric development
mining
natural resource conflicts
settler colonialism
tar sands
topic_facet activism
Canada
clearcutting
extractivism
First Nations
hydroelectric development
mining
natural resource conflicts
settler colonialism
tar sands
url https://doi.org/10.3390/h5030055