Confronting Settler Colonialism When Assessing the Impact of Mining on Indigenous Peoples' Health and Well-Being

In Northern Canada, mechanisms governing mining designed to address health and well-being impacts find their origin in modern-day treaties. However, advancements to environmental assessments, impact benefit agreements, and health impact assessments have yet to reflect calls to redress the legacies o...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jones, Jennifer
Other Authors: Bradshaw, Benjamin, Harper, Sherilee
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Guelph 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10214/21276
Description
Summary:In Northern Canada, mechanisms governing mining designed to address health and well-being impacts find their origin in modern-day treaties. However, advancements to environmental assessments, impact benefit agreements, and health impact assessments have yet to reflect calls to redress the legacies of structural injustices in mining governance processes related to settler colonialism, such as residential schools and forced relocation. This dissertation responds to these calls, and argues that in order to better address the impact of mining on Indigenous Peoples’ health and well-being, governance mechanisms should consider how Indigenous Peoples describe the impact of mining, challenge the presumptions underlying governance mandates, and find ways to reflect and consider impacts of settler colonialism as experienced by Indigenous Peoples. This participatory case study, premised on decolonizing research approaches, was conducted with Little Salmon Carmacks First Nation (LSCFN), a self-governing First Nation in Yukon. Data were gathered from a total of 56 interviews with Yukon First Nations Peoples (n=42) and individuals who operationalize mining governance (n=21), and a community focus group meeting with LSCFN, complemented by digital storytelling, research assistant training, and a survey. Key findings, emergent from qualitative analysis and circle sorting, reveal that: 1) attention to intersectional Indigenous values, and not discrete impacts from mining, illustrate the important intersections between and among the loss of culture and language, kinship ties, and access to the land with the diverse impacts of mining operations; and 2) mining governance mechanisms are institutions that often perpetuate loss of identity and dispossession of land and, as a result, undermine modern-day treaty relations. In response, this dissertation introduces potential strategies designed to confront settler assumptions and reconsider what data to assess in mining assessments, based on Indigenous values and relationships with lands. ...