'Like Ice Floes': Iñupiaq Sovereignty and Settler Migration on Alaska's North Slope

My dissertation examines relations between Iñupiat in the village of Utqiaġvik on Alaska’s North Slope and a number of non-Iñupiat transient workers who, enticed by generous salaries, have temporarily relocated there. A focus of my study is the North Slope Borough, founded by Iñupiat to preserve the...

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Main Author: Walsh, Elizabeth
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Cambridge 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/348370
https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.95794
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spelling ftunivcam:oai:www.repository.cam.ac.uk:1810/348370 2024-01-21T10:08:51+01:00 'Like Ice Floes': Iñupiaq Sovereignty and Settler Migration on Alaska's North Slope Walsh, Elizabeth 2023-04-03T13:41:11Z application/pdf https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/348370 https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.95794 eng eng University of Cambridge Department of Social Anthropology https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/348370 doi:10.17863/CAM.95794 All Rights Reserved https://www.rioxx.net/licenses/all-rights-reserved/ Alaska environment labour relations Native studies settler colonialism Thesis Doctoral Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) 2023 ftunivcam https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.95794 2023-12-28T23:22:12Z My dissertation examines relations between Iñupiat in the village of Utqiaġvik on Alaska’s North Slope and a number of non-Iñupiat transient workers who, enticed by generous salaries, have temporarily relocated there. A focus of my study is the North Slope Borough, founded by Iñupiat to preserve their political autonomy and funded by taxes collected on the nearby Prudhoe Bay oil fields. My research tests and refines theoretical frameworks concerning settler colonialism. I draw on political, economic, and environmental literatures in sociocultural anthropology, as well as Native American and Indigenous studies and interdisciplinary settler colonial studies, to show how Iñupiat and non-Iñupiat village residents engage in day-to-day interactions guided by differing economic motivations and different understandings of community, place, and value. By working in an Indigenous community with both Iñupiat and non-Iñupiat, my research adds contemporary, on-the-ground, ethnographic insight into the ways in which individuals’ perspectives and attitudes are shaped by settler colonial ideologies as they are experienced in the present. I explicitly locate the origins of attitudes and dispositions of both non-Iñupiat transient workers and Iñupiat in the settler colonial past, while also tracing how these norms have endured structurally into the present. Long-term participant observation has allowed me to explore the ways in which socio-political norms are felt in, and inform, everyday life. In the first two chapters, I contextualize contemporary transient worker passage through the village within a history of colonial comings and goings to the region initiated by European explorers and Yankee whalers pursuing similar economic goals. I locate Native Alaska, the North Slope, and Utqiaġvik within the legal and political frameworks of United States settler colonialism and demonstrate that contemporary relations among non-Iñupiat transient workers and Alaska Natives are grounded in norms and understandings derived from these ... Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis north slope Prudhoe Bay Alaska Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository Yankee ENVELOPE(-59.769,-59.769,-62.526,-62.526)
institution Open Polar
collection Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
op_collection_id ftunivcam
language English
topic Alaska
environment
labour relations
Native studies
settler colonialism
spellingShingle Alaska
environment
labour relations
Native studies
settler colonialism
Walsh, Elizabeth
'Like Ice Floes': Iñupiaq Sovereignty and Settler Migration on Alaska's North Slope
topic_facet Alaska
environment
labour relations
Native studies
settler colonialism
description My dissertation examines relations between Iñupiat in the village of Utqiaġvik on Alaska’s North Slope and a number of non-Iñupiat transient workers who, enticed by generous salaries, have temporarily relocated there. A focus of my study is the North Slope Borough, founded by Iñupiat to preserve their political autonomy and funded by taxes collected on the nearby Prudhoe Bay oil fields. My research tests and refines theoretical frameworks concerning settler colonialism. I draw on political, economic, and environmental literatures in sociocultural anthropology, as well as Native American and Indigenous studies and interdisciplinary settler colonial studies, to show how Iñupiat and non-Iñupiat village residents engage in day-to-day interactions guided by differing economic motivations and different understandings of community, place, and value. By working in an Indigenous community with both Iñupiat and non-Iñupiat, my research adds contemporary, on-the-ground, ethnographic insight into the ways in which individuals’ perspectives and attitudes are shaped by settler colonial ideologies as they are experienced in the present. I explicitly locate the origins of attitudes and dispositions of both non-Iñupiat transient workers and Iñupiat in the settler colonial past, while also tracing how these norms have endured structurally into the present. Long-term participant observation has allowed me to explore the ways in which socio-political norms are felt in, and inform, everyday life. In the first two chapters, I contextualize contemporary transient worker passage through the village within a history of colonial comings and goings to the region initiated by European explorers and Yankee whalers pursuing similar economic goals. I locate Native Alaska, the North Slope, and Utqiaġvik within the legal and political frameworks of United States settler colonialism and demonstrate that contemporary relations among non-Iñupiat transient workers and Alaska Natives are grounded in norms and understandings derived from these ...
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Walsh, Elizabeth
author_facet Walsh, Elizabeth
author_sort Walsh, Elizabeth
title 'Like Ice Floes': Iñupiaq Sovereignty and Settler Migration on Alaska's North Slope
title_short 'Like Ice Floes': Iñupiaq Sovereignty and Settler Migration on Alaska's North Slope
title_full 'Like Ice Floes': Iñupiaq Sovereignty and Settler Migration on Alaska's North Slope
title_fullStr 'Like Ice Floes': Iñupiaq Sovereignty and Settler Migration on Alaska's North Slope
title_full_unstemmed 'Like Ice Floes': Iñupiaq Sovereignty and Settler Migration on Alaska's North Slope
title_sort 'like ice floes': iñupiaq sovereignty and settler migration on alaska's north slope
publisher University of Cambridge
publishDate 2023
url https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/348370
https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.95794
long_lat ENVELOPE(-59.769,-59.769,-62.526,-62.526)
geographic Yankee
geographic_facet Yankee
genre north slope
Prudhoe Bay
Alaska
genre_facet north slope
Prudhoe Bay
Alaska
op_relation https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/348370
doi:10.17863/CAM.95794
op_rights All Rights Reserved
https://www.rioxx.net/licenses/all-rights-reserved/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.95794
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