First Nations, rednecks, and radicals: re-thinking the 'sides' of resource conflict in rural British Columbia

Graduate In 2010 the lands of the Cariboo-Chilcotin became a site of contestation and collaboration. Through media coverage of a Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency Review Panel process sources were quick to frame the issue (a potential gold-copper mine and the destruction of a lake in Tsilhqot...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wellburn, Jane
Other Authors: Thom, Brian
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1828/3930
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spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:3930 2023-05-15T16:15:10+02:00 First Nations, rednecks, and radicals: re-thinking the 'sides' of resource conflict in rural British Columbia Wellburn, Jane Thom, Brian 2012-04-27 http://hdl.handle.net/1828/3930 en eng 3930 http://hdl.handle.net/1828/3930 undefined UVic’s Research and Learning Repository scipo socio Thesis https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_46ec/ 2012 fttriple 2023-01-22T18:29:58Z Graduate In 2010 the lands of the Cariboo-Chilcotin became a site of contestation and collaboration. Through media coverage of a Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency Review Panel process sources were quick to frame the issue (a potential gold-copper mine and the destruction of a lake in Tsilhqot’in territories) as one between First Nations and development, with 'development' taken as an unquestioned tenet of non-Aboriginal interest. The polarization visible in the media obscured on-the-ground efforts of First Nations and non-Aboriginal people alike to support each other in opposition to this project; a collaboration that saw the application ultimately rejected by the federal government. My research reflects on the review process that acted as a forum for a diverse range of First Nations and non-Aboriginal peoples to vocalize concerns outside of the stereotypes or expectations attached to ethnicity. Statements from the opposition covered a breadth of concern, encompassing a social, physical and cultural environment, and addressing larger issues of Aboriginal rights, title, and self-determination. These concerns offered the Panel a remarkably broad base of potential adverse effects to transparently justify their decision that the multi-billion dollar mine not proceed. Establishing visibility for these acts of solidarity and common ground may be a means of re-thinking the perception of division between ethnic communities in rural British Columbia; a perception that often perpetuates tense relationships in the face of large-scale resource development. Thesis First Nations Unknown Copper Mine ENVELOPE(-59.667,-59.667,-62.383,-62.383)
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
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language English
topic scipo
socio
spellingShingle scipo
socio
Wellburn, Jane
First Nations, rednecks, and radicals: re-thinking the 'sides' of resource conflict in rural British Columbia
topic_facet scipo
socio
description Graduate In 2010 the lands of the Cariboo-Chilcotin became a site of contestation and collaboration. Through media coverage of a Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency Review Panel process sources were quick to frame the issue (a potential gold-copper mine and the destruction of a lake in Tsilhqot’in territories) as one between First Nations and development, with 'development' taken as an unquestioned tenet of non-Aboriginal interest. The polarization visible in the media obscured on-the-ground efforts of First Nations and non-Aboriginal people alike to support each other in opposition to this project; a collaboration that saw the application ultimately rejected by the federal government. My research reflects on the review process that acted as a forum for a diverse range of First Nations and non-Aboriginal peoples to vocalize concerns outside of the stereotypes or expectations attached to ethnicity. Statements from the opposition covered a breadth of concern, encompassing a social, physical and cultural environment, and addressing larger issues of Aboriginal rights, title, and self-determination. These concerns offered the Panel a remarkably broad base of potential adverse effects to transparently justify their decision that the multi-billion dollar mine not proceed. Establishing visibility for these acts of solidarity and common ground may be a means of re-thinking the perception of division between ethnic communities in rural British Columbia; a perception that often perpetuates tense relationships in the face of large-scale resource development.
author2 Thom, Brian
format Thesis
author Wellburn, Jane
author_facet Wellburn, Jane
author_sort Wellburn, Jane
title First Nations, rednecks, and radicals: re-thinking the 'sides' of resource conflict in rural British Columbia
title_short First Nations, rednecks, and radicals: re-thinking the 'sides' of resource conflict in rural British Columbia
title_full First Nations, rednecks, and radicals: re-thinking the 'sides' of resource conflict in rural British Columbia
title_fullStr First Nations, rednecks, and radicals: re-thinking the 'sides' of resource conflict in rural British Columbia
title_full_unstemmed First Nations, rednecks, and radicals: re-thinking the 'sides' of resource conflict in rural British Columbia
title_sort first nations, rednecks, and radicals: re-thinking the 'sides' of resource conflict in rural british columbia
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/1828/3930
long_lat ENVELOPE(-59.667,-59.667,-62.383,-62.383)
geographic Copper Mine
geographic_facet Copper Mine
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_source UVic’s Research and Learning Repository
op_relation 3930
http://hdl.handle.net/1828/3930
op_rights undefined
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