MANUFACTURING INSECURITY: POWER, WATER, WASTE, AND THE SILENCES OF SUSTAINABILITY AND SUFFERING IN NORTHWEST ALASKA

With its oil wealth and an environment of abundant rivers, lakes, and the largest coastline in the United States, Alaska is one of the last places one would expect to find water insecurity. Yet approximately one third of households in remote Alaska Native villages lack in-home piped water and suffer...

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Main Author: Eichelberger, Laura Palen
Other Authors: Green, Linda B., Nichter, Mark, Nichter, Mimi, Shaw, Susan, Perreault, Thomas
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: The University of Arizona. 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/204332
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spelling ftunivarizona:oai:repository.arizona.edu:10150/204332 2023-05-15T16:55:18+02:00 MANUFACTURING INSECURITY: POWER, WATER, WASTE, AND THE SILENCES OF SUSTAINABILITY AND SUFFERING IN NORTHWEST ALASKA Eichelberger, Laura Palen Green, Linda B. Nichter, Mark Nichter, Mimi Shaw, Susan Perreault, Thomas 2011 http://hdl.handle.net/10150/204332 en eng The University of Arizona. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/204332 752261456 11595 Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. Alaska Development Energy Inuit Sustainability Water text Electronic Dissertation 2011 ftunivarizona 2020-06-14T08:05:26Z With its oil wealth and an environment of abundant rivers, lakes, and the largest coastline in the United States, Alaska is one of the last places one would expect to find water insecurity. Yet approximately one third of households in remote Alaska Native villages lack in-home piped water and suffer the health consequences of poor sanitation and inadequate treated water. This problem has become particularly acute in the wake of surging energy prices and a concomitant shift in policies that increasingly require demonstrated economic sustainability before funding will be allocated for village water and sanitation projects. In response to increasing costs of living and the failure of development projects to foster the conditions under which they would be able to provide for their needs, many Iñupiat assert the importance of traditional values, practices and values that from their view constitute a path out of insecurity and into self-sufficiency. These Iñupiat point to modern technology as the source of what they call the spoiling of their communities. In this dissertation, I explore the disjuncture between how the state and the Iñupiat signify historical and contemporary issues and solutions around water, energy, and development. I suggest that the unintended consequences of decades of interventions to improve Iñupiaq health and well-being have been manufactured insecurity that is exacerbated by weakened social networks of reciprocity (the Iñupiaq traditional value of sharing), and rendered invisible by sustainability policies. I argue that these multifaceted processes of domination and suffering are all part of what many Iñupiat describe spoiling. In other words, when the Iñupiat talk about being spoiled by technology, they are talking about the historical domination by the state over their social reproduction in ways that produce and exacerbate the insecurities characterizing daily life in these remote villages. Dissertation not available (per author's request) previously embargoed until May 2, 2013; restricted on June 3, 2013 per author's request; KC Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis inuit Alaska The University of Arizona: UA Campus Repository
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Arizona: UA Campus Repository
op_collection_id ftunivarizona
language English
topic Alaska
Development
Energy
Inuit
Sustainability
Water
spellingShingle Alaska
Development
Energy
Inuit
Sustainability
Water
Eichelberger, Laura Palen
MANUFACTURING INSECURITY: POWER, WATER, WASTE, AND THE SILENCES OF SUSTAINABILITY AND SUFFERING IN NORTHWEST ALASKA
topic_facet Alaska
Development
Energy
Inuit
Sustainability
Water
description With its oil wealth and an environment of abundant rivers, lakes, and the largest coastline in the United States, Alaska is one of the last places one would expect to find water insecurity. Yet approximately one third of households in remote Alaska Native villages lack in-home piped water and suffer the health consequences of poor sanitation and inadequate treated water. This problem has become particularly acute in the wake of surging energy prices and a concomitant shift in policies that increasingly require demonstrated economic sustainability before funding will be allocated for village water and sanitation projects. In response to increasing costs of living and the failure of development projects to foster the conditions under which they would be able to provide for their needs, many Iñupiat assert the importance of traditional values, practices and values that from their view constitute a path out of insecurity and into self-sufficiency. These Iñupiat point to modern technology as the source of what they call the spoiling of their communities. In this dissertation, I explore the disjuncture between how the state and the Iñupiat signify historical and contemporary issues and solutions around water, energy, and development. I suggest that the unintended consequences of decades of interventions to improve Iñupiaq health and well-being have been manufactured insecurity that is exacerbated by weakened social networks of reciprocity (the Iñupiaq traditional value of sharing), and rendered invisible by sustainability policies. I argue that these multifaceted processes of domination and suffering are all part of what many Iñupiat describe spoiling. In other words, when the Iñupiat talk about being spoiled by technology, they are talking about the historical domination by the state over their social reproduction in ways that produce and exacerbate the insecurities characterizing daily life in these remote villages. Dissertation not available (per author's request) previously embargoed until May 2, 2013; restricted on June 3, 2013 per author's request; KC
author2 Green, Linda B.
Nichter, Mark
Nichter, Mimi
Shaw, Susan
Perreault, Thomas
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Eichelberger, Laura Palen
author_facet Eichelberger, Laura Palen
author_sort Eichelberger, Laura Palen
title MANUFACTURING INSECURITY: POWER, WATER, WASTE, AND THE SILENCES OF SUSTAINABILITY AND SUFFERING IN NORTHWEST ALASKA
title_short MANUFACTURING INSECURITY: POWER, WATER, WASTE, AND THE SILENCES OF SUSTAINABILITY AND SUFFERING IN NORTHWEST ALASKA
title_full MANUFACTURING INSECURITY: POWER, WATER, WASTE, AND THE SILENCES OF SUSTAINABILITY AND SUFFERING IN NORTHWEST ALASKA
title_fullStr MANUFACTURING INSECURITY: POWER, WATER, WASTE, AND THE SILENCES OF SUSTAINABILITY AND SUFFERING IN NORTHWEST ALASKA
title_full_unstemmed MANUFACTURING INSECURITY: POWER, WATER, WASTE, AND THE SILENCES OF SUSTAINABILITY AND SUFFERING IN NORTHWEST ALASKA
title_sort manufacturing insecurity: power, water, waste, and the silences of sustainability and suffering in northwest alaska
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/204332
genre inuit
Alaska
genre_facet inuit
Alaska
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10150/204332
752261456
11595
op_rights Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author.
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