Apathy, Antipathy and Settler Colonial Constructs of Environmental Justice: A Sentiment Analysis

Within so-called Canada, settler colonialism exists as an ongoing structure of capitalism and dominance that contributes to land dispossession and, as such, informs the reproduction of environmental violence: a holistic form of violence that negatively affects Indigenous communities through a series...

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Main Author: Amara Digout
Format: Report
Language:unknown
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.32920/19525939.v1
https://figshare.com/articles/report/Apathy_Antipathy_and_Settler_Colonial_Constructs_of_Environmental_Justice_A_Sentiment_Analysis/19525939
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spelling fttorometrofigs:oai:figshare.com:article/19525939 2023-11-12T04:17:08+01:00 Apathy, Antipathy and Settler Colonial Constructs of Environmental Justice: A Sentiment Analysis Amara Digout 2022-04-06T15:53:00Z https://doi.org/10.32920/19525939.v1 https://figshare.com/articles/report/Apathy_Antipathy_and_Settler_Colonial_Constructs_of_Environmental_Justice_A_Sentiment_Analysis/19525939 unknown doi:10.32920/19525939.v1 https://figshare.com/articles/report/Apathy_Antipathy_and_Settler_Colonial_Constructs_of_Environmental_Justice_A_Sentiment_Analysis/19525939 In Copyright Indigenous policy and policy administration Environmental policy Drinking water -- Contamination -- Canada Water rights -- Canada Native peoples -- Canada -- Government relations Indigenous peoples -- Ecology Internet and indigenous peoples Text Report 2022 fttorometrofigs https://doi.org/10.32920/19525939.v1 2023-10-15T05:42:41Z Within so-called Canada, settler colonialism exists as an ongoing structure of capitalism and dominance that contributes to land dispossession and, as such, informs the reproduction of environmental violence: a holistic form of violence that negatively affects Indigenous communities through a series of physical, spiritual, and emotional harms like that of the First Nations water crisis. This paper addresses commonly held sentiments towards the First Nations water crisis as they appear in social media comments on a recently posted video of Black and Indigenous activists at the International Climate Conference speaking to their lived experiences of environmental racism (CBC Canada, 2021). Million’s (2013) felt theory and notion of sociopolitical imaginaries are employed in this paper to guide the reframing of popular sentiments of apathy and antipathy that exist in the collective settler consciousness regarding environmental racism, the First Nations water crisis, and settler-colonial violence on Indigenous lands and bodies (as cited by Meissner, 2017). Further discussion is elicited on the relationship between local forms of environmental violence and the global climate crisis, with emphasis made towards reimagining the foci of international environmental stewardship movements as based on Indigenous ways of knowing and being. This research paper was written, in part, as a contribution to the collaborative learning forum at X University titled Apathy to Empathy: Addressing the First Nations Water Crisis. Upon presenting this research at the event, an original creative piece was included, which maps the research presented in this paper and includes a collection of images related to the First Nations water crisis, settler colonialism, land degradation, and environmental advocacy (See Appendix). Report First Nations Research from Toronto Metropolitan University Canada
institution Open Polar
collection Research from Toronto Metropolitan University
op_collection_id fttorometrofigs
language unknown
topic Indigenous policy and policy administration
Environmental policy
Drinking water -- Contamination -- Canada
Water rights -- Canada
Native peoples -- Canada -- Government relations
Indigenous peoples -- Ecology
Internet and indigenous peoples
spellingShingle Indigenous policy and policy administration
Environmental policy
Drinking water -- Contamination -- Canada
Water rights -- Canada
Native peoples -- Canada -- Government relations
Indigenous peoples -- Ecology
Internet and indigenous peoples
Amara Digout
Apathy, Antipathy and Settler Colonial Constructs of Environmental Justice: A Sentiment Analysis
topic_facet Indigenous policy and policy administration
Environmental policy
Drinking water -- Contamination -- Canada
Water rights -- Canada
Native peoples -- Canada -- Government relations
Indigenous peoples -- Ecology
Internet and indigenous peoples
description Within so-called Canada, settler colonialism exists as an ongoing structure of capitalism and dominance that contributes to land dispossession and, as such, informs the reproduction of environmental violence: a holistic form of violence that negatively affects Indigenous communities through a series of physical, spiritual, and emotional harms like that of the First Nations water crisis. This paper addresses commonly held sentiments towards the First Nations water crisis as they appear in social media comments on a recently posted video of Black and Indigenous activists at the International Climate Conference speaking to their lived experiences of environmental racism (CBC Canada, 2021). Million’s (2013) felt theory and notion of sociopolitical imaginaries are employed in this paper to guide the reframing of popular sentiments of apathy and antipathy that exist in the collective settler consciousness regarding environmental racism, the First Nations water crisis, and settler-colonial violence on Indigenous lands and bodies (as cited by Meissner, 2017). Further discussion is elicited on the relationship between local forms of environmental violence and the global climate crisis, with emphasis made towards reimagining the foci of international environmental stewardship movements as based on Indigenous ways of knowing and being. This research paper was written, in part, as a contribution to the collaborative learning forum at X University titled Apathy to Empathy: Addressing the First Nations Water Crisis. Upon presenting this research at the event, an original creative piece was included, which maps the research presented in this paper and includes a collection of images related to the First Nations water crisis, settler colonialism, land degradation, and environmental advocacy (See Appendix).
format Report
author Amara Digout
author_facet Amara Digout
author_sort Amara Digout
title Apathy, Antipathy and Settler Colonial Constructs of Environmental Justice: A Sentiment Analysis
title_short Apathy, Antipathy and Settler Colonial Constructs of Environmental Justice: A Sentiment Analysis
title_full Apathy, Antipathy and Settler Colonial Constructs of Environmental Justice: A Sentiment Analysis
title_fullStr Apathy, Antipathy and Settler Colonial Constructs of Environmental Justice: A Sentiment Analysis
title_full_unstemmed Apathy, Antipathy and Settler Colonial Constructs of Environmental Justice: A Sentiment Analysis
title_sort apathy, antipathy and settler colonial constructs of environmental justice: a sentiment analysis
publishDate 2022
url https://doi.org/10.32920/19525939.v1
https://figshare.com/articles/report/Apathy_Antipathy_and_Settler_Colonial_Constructs_of_Environmental_Justice_A_Sentiment_Analysis/19525939
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation doi:10.32920/19525939.v1
https://figshare.com/articles/report/Apathy_Antipathy_and_Settler_Colonial_Constructs_of_Environmental_Justice_A_Sentiment_Analysis/19525939
op_rights In Copyright
op_doi https://doi.org/10.32920/19525939.v1
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