Land Use, Power, and Knowledge at the Northern Resource Frontier: Mining, Public Engagement, and Contentious Land Imaginaries in Bristol Bay and the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta

The Donlin and Pebbles mines are two of the eight industrial-scale hard rock mines currently under the review of Alaska’s Large Mine Permitting program. Both projects promise to deliver profit and employment to their respective regions: Pebble to Bristol Bay in the southwest, and Donlin to the Yukon...

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Main Author: Tollefson, Jonathan
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: UVM ScholarWorks 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/graddis/977
https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/context/graddis/article/1977/viewcontent/Tollefson_uvm_0243N_10767.pdf
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spelling ftunivermont:oai:scholarworks.uvm.edu:graddis-1977 2023-07-02T03:32:52+02:00 Land Use, Power, and Knowledge at the Northern Resource Frontier: Mining, Public Engagement, and Contentious Land Imaginaries in Bristol Bay and the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta Tollefson, Jonathan 2018-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/graddis/977 https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/context/graddis/article/1977/viewcontent/Tollefson_uvm_0243N_10767.pdf en eng UVM ScholarWorks https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/graddis/977 https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/context/graddis/article/1977/viewcontent/Tollefson_uvm_0243N_10767.pdf Graduate College Dissertations and Theses Alaska knowledge land use mining public engagement Natural Resources Management and Policy text 2018 ftunivermont 2023-06-13T18:30:44Z The Donlin and Pebbles mines are two of the eight industrial-scale hard rock mines currently under the review of Alaska’s Large Mine Permitting program. Both projects promise to deliver profit and employment to their respective regions: Pebble to Bristol Bay in the southwest, and Donlin to the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, just north of Pebble. Both projects would also produce exceptional quantities of waste and will require almost-unprecedented infrastructure development, potentially threatening the lives and subsistence livelihoods of the Alaska Native peoples in their respective regions. The Pebble project inspired international protest and led to the emergence of a powerful resistance coalition of commercial, recreational, and subsistence fishers; activists and expert-consultants were thus able to build a powerful movement outside of and prior to the state permitting and impact assessment process. The coalitions that arose to oppose the Donlin project, in contrast, channeled their work through the state’s official public engagement processes – in part, due to strategic limitations stemming from the complexities of land use, sovereignty, and development politics specific to the Yukon-Kuskokwim region. The coalitional resistance to Pebble and the creative use of Donlin’s public participation process are key sites in which Western science and knowledge systems, as well as land use ideologies centered on extraction and profit, meet with Native Alaskan traditional knowledge and subsistence approaches to land use. I draw upon a history of Alaskan land use policy alongside extensive interviews with community organizers, state and federal officials, mining industry officials, and consultants in order to describe and understand the result: a set of creative resistance strategies that forefront hybrid approaches to knowledge and multiple, overlapping understandings of the land. Unfortunately, Alaska’s large mine permitting and environmental assessment processes are often structurally and epistemologically unable to consider ... Text Kuskokwim Alaska Yukon The University of Vermont: ScholarWorks @ UVM Yukon
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Vermont: ScholarWorks @ UVM
op_collection_id ftunivermont
language English
topic Alaska
knowledge
land use
mining
public engagement
Natural Resources Management and Policy
spellingShingle Alaska
knowledge
land use
mining
public engagement
Natural Resources Management and Policy
Tollefson, Jonathan
Land Use, Power, and Knowledge at the Northern Resource Frontier: Mining, Public Engagement, and Contentious Land Imaginaries in Bristol Bay and the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta
topic_facet Alaska
knowledge
land use
mining
public engagement
Natural Resources Management and Policy
description The Donlin and Pebbles mines are two of the eight industrial-scale hard rock mines currently under the review of Alaska’s Large Mine Permitting program. Both projects promise to deliver profit and employment to their respective regions: Pebble to Bristol Bay in the southwest, and Donlin to the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, just north of Pebble. Both projects would also produce exceptional quantities of waste and will require almost-unprecedented infrastructure development, potentially threatening the lives and subsistence livelihoods of the Alaska Native peoples in their respective regions. The Pebble project inspired international protest and led to the emergence of a powerful resistance coalition of commercial, recreational, and subsistence fishers; activists and expert-consultants were thus able to build a powerful movement outside of and prior to the state permitting and impact assessment process. The coalitions that arose to oppose the Donlin project, in contrast, channeled their work through the state’s official public engagement processes – in part, due to strategic limitations stemming from the complexities of land use, sovereignty, and development politics specific to the Yukon-Kuskokwim region. The coalitional resistance to Pebble and the creative use of Donlin’s public participation process are key sites in which Western science and knowledge systems, as well as land use ideologies centered on extraction and profit, meet with Native Alaskan traditional knowledge and subsistence approaches to land use. I draw upon a history of Alaskan land use policy alongside extensive interviews with community organizers, state and federal officials, mining industry officials, and consultants in order to describe and understand the result: a set of creative resistance strategies that forefront hybrid approaches to knowledge and multiple, overlapping understandings of the land. Unfortunately, Alaska’s large mine permitting and environmental assessment processes are often structurally and epistemologically unable to consider ...
format Text
author Tollefson, Jonathan
author_facet Tollefson, Jonathan
author_sort Tollefson, Jonathan
title Land Use, Power, and Knowledge at the Northern Resource Frontier: Mining, Public Engagement, and Contentious Land Imaginaries in Bristol Bay and the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta
title_short Land Use, Power, and Knowledge at the Northern Resource Frontier: Mining, Public Engagement, and Contentious Land Imaginaries in Bristol Bay and the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta
title_full Land Use, Power, and Knowledge at the Northern Resource Frontier: Mining, Public Engagement, and Contentious Land Imaginaries in Bristol Bay and the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta
title_fullStr Land Use, Power, and Knowledge at the Northern Resource Frontier: Mining, Public Engagement, and Contentious Land Imaginaries in Bristol Bay and the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta
title_full_unstemmed Land Use, Power, and Knowledge at the Northern Resource Frontier: Mining, Public Engagement, and Contentious Land Imaginaries in Bristol Bay and the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta
title_sort land use, power, and knowledge at the northern resource frontier: mining, public engagement, and contentious land imaginaries in bristol bay and the yukon-kuskokwim delta
publisher UVM ScholarWorks
publishDate 2018
url https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/graddis/977
https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/context/graddis/article/1977/viewcontent/Tollefson_uvm_0243N_10767.pdf
geographic Yukon
geographic_facet Yukon
genre Kuskokwim
Alaska
Yukon
genre_facet Kuskokwim
Alaska
Yukon
op_source Graduate College Dissertations and Theses
op_relation https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/graddis/977
https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/context/graddis/article/1977/viewcontent/Tollefson_uvm_0243N_10767.pdf
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