Contesting sustainability in the Valley of the Grizzly Spirit: Models of justice in environmental conflict and assessment

This dissertation examines the conflict within and around the environmental assessment of the controversial proposal to develop Jumbo Glacier Resort in an uninhabited valley in southeast BC. Taking bearings from philosophical pragmatism the research attends to the various arguments of supporters and...

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Main Author: Owens, Cameron Elliott
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://summit.sfu.ca/item/12090
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spelling ftsimonfu:oai:summit.sfu.ca:12090 2023-05-15T16:17:02+02:00 Contesting sustainability in the Valley of the Grizzly Spirit: Models of justice in environmental conflict and assessment Owens, Cameron Elliott 2011-12-19 http://summit.sfu.ca/item/12090 unknown etd7006 http://summit.sfu.ca/item/12090 Thesis 2011 ftsimonfu 2022-04-07T18:37:58Z This dissertation examines the conflict within and around the environmental assessment of the controversial proposal to develop Jumbo Glacier Resort in an uninhabited valley in southeast BC. Taking bearings from philosophical pragmatism the research attends to the various arguments of supporters and opponents of the project – both Native and settler - and the creative means by which they represent this place and what is to be done there. In particular it shows how sustainable development as a transcendent planning ideal comes to be variously articulated and contested in specific contexts of the ground. Following Boltanski and Thévenot (2006), I show how this conflict can be articulated as competing representations of various models of justice legitimated with respect to location, the market, technical-rationality, equality and accessibility; tradition, inspiration, popularity and environmental concern. This research demonstrates the usefulness of such an approach for geographers examining environmental conflicts, but also shows how the geographer’s attention to the contested reproduction of place sharpens this analytical tool. More immediately the research tells the intriguing story (or stories) of the struggle over the Jumbo Valley, or what the Ktunaxa Nation recognize as the “Valley of the Grizzly Spirit”, seeking to explain the intensity of the conflict and the factors that have confounded decision-makers over the past twenty years. The extent to which both supporters and opponents are able to plausibly mobilize economic, social, ecological and other arguments to buttress their positions insinuates a muddling of public-political credibility around sustainability. The field-based research took me to the communities of southeast BC, the high country above them and to the halls of power in the provincial capital of Victoria over three summers. Data from extensive document analysis and in-depth interviews with key actors, including proponents, supporters, opposition, First Nations and local and provincial officials provided the basis for this ethnography. Thesis First Nations Summit - SFU Research Repository (Simon Fraser University) Buttress ENVELOPE(-57.083,-57.083,-63.550,-63.550)
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collection Summit - SFU Research Repository (Simon Fraser University)
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description This dissertation examines the conflict within and around the environmental assessment of the controversial proposal to develop Jumbo Glacier Resort in an uninhabited valley in southeast BC. Taking bearings from philosophical pragmatism the research attends to the various arguments of supporters and opponents of the project – both Native and settler - and the creative means by which they represent this place and what is to be done there. In particular it shows how sustainable development as a transcendent planning ideal comes to be variously articulated and contested in specific contexts of the ground. Following Boltanski and Thévenot (2006), I show how this conflict can be articulated as competing representations of various models of justice legitimated with respect to location, the market, technical-rationality, equality and accessibility; tradition, inspiration, popularity and environmental concern. This research demonstrates the usefulness of such an approach for geographers examining environmental conflicts, but also shows how the geographer’s attention to the contested reproduction of place sharpens this analytical tool. More immediately the research tells the intriguing story (or stories) of the struggle over the Jumbo Valley, or what the Ktunaxa Nation recognize as the “Valley of the Grizzly Spirit”, seeking to explain the intensity of the conflict and the factors that have confounded decision-makers over the past twenty years. The extent to which both supporters and opponents are able to plausibly mobilize economic, social, ecological and other arguments to buttress their positions insinuates a muddling of public-political credibility around sustainability. The field-based research took me to the communities of southeast BC, the high country above them and to the halls of power in the provincial capital of Victoria over three summers. Data from extensive document analysis and in-depth interviews with key actors, including proponents, supporters, opposition, First Nations and local and provincial officials provided the basis for this ethnography.
format Thesis
author Owens, Cameron Elliott
spellingShingle Owens, Cameron Elliott
Contesting sustainability in the Valley of the Grizzly Spirit: Models of justice in environmental conflict and assessment
author_facet Owens, Cameron Elliott
author_sort Owens, Cameron Elliott
title Contesting sustainability in the Valley of the Grizzly Spirit: Models of justice in environmental conflict and assessment
title_short Contesting sustainability in the Valley of the Grizzly Spirit: Models of justice in environmental conflict and assessment
title_full Contesting sustainability in the Valley of the Grizzly Spirit: Models of justice in environmental conflict and assessment
title_fullStr Contesting sustainability in the Valley of the Grizzly Spirit: Models of justice in environmental conflict and assessment
title_full_unstemmed Contesting sustainability in the Valley of the Grizzly Spirit: Models of justice in environmental conflict and assessment
title_sort contesting sustainability in the valley of the grizzly spirit: models of justice in environmental conflict and assessment
publishDate 2011
url http://summit.sfu.ca/item/12090
long_lat ENVELOPE(-57.083,-57.083,-63.550,-63.550)
geographic Buttress
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genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
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