Staples theory, oil, and indigenous alternative development in the Northwest Territories

Staples theory has been used as a framework to explain the historical establishment and political economy of Canada and other “new” countries, based on the concept that Canada has been and continues to be built on an economy of resource extraction. The theory has been applied on both a macro and a m...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bush, Donna
Other Authors: Lawson, James Charles Barkley
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
oil
Online Access:https://dspace.library.uvic.ca//handle/1828/8947
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spelling ftuvicpubl:oai:dspace.library.uvic.ca:1828/8947 2023-05-15T16:55:15+02:00 Staples theory, oil, and indigenous alternative development in the Northwest Territories Bush, Donna Lawson, James Charles Barkley 2017 application/pdf https://dspace.library.uvic.ca//handle/1828/8947 English en eng https://dspace.library.uvic.ca//handle/1828/8947 Available to the World Wide Web Staples theory Northwest Territories oil Norman Wells Indigenous Thesis 2017 ftuvicpubl 2022-05-19T06:13:25Z Staples theory has been used as a framework to explain the historical establishment and political economy of Canada and other “new” countries, based on the concept that Canada has been and continues to be built on an economy of resource extraction. The theory has been applied on both a macro and a micro scale to regions of Canada that have specialized in the extraction of cod, wheat, fur, and oil and gas. Two foundational academics of staples theory, Harold A. Innis and Mel Watkins, spent time in the northern region of Canada now known as the Northwest Territories (NWT) and, among other researchers, applied a staples approach to various periods of the region’s economic development. The application of staples theory in northern Canada, however, is problematic, particularly in view of the territory’s predominantly Indigenous, Inuit, and Métis population. A staples framework tends to ignore, or underplay, a fundamental reality in the NWT: the original political economy of the region was based on Indigenous values of communal trading and sharing in a subsistence economy. Most importantly, the Indigenous economy was controlled and distributed by the Indigenous people as they lived on, and carefully managed, the land and resources of the North. A theoretical approach that centers on the extraction and commodification of resources in the North by white traders and settlers who take over the land, obscures the critical questions of who owns and cares for the land and how it is ‘developed’. Graduate Thesis inuit Northwest Territories University of Victoria (Canada): UVicDSpace Canada Norman Wells ENVELOPE(-126.833,-126.833,65.282,65.282) Northwest Territories Watkins ENVELOPE(-67.086,-67.086,-66.354,-66.354)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Victoria (Canada): UVicDSpace
op_collection_id ftuvicpubl
language English
topic Staples theory
Northwest Territories
oil
Norman Wells
Indigenous
spellingShingle Staples theory
Northwest Territories
oil
Norman Wells
Indigenous
Bush, Donna
Staples theory, oil, and indigenous alternative development in the Northwest Territories
topic_facet Staples theory
Northwest Territories
oil
Norman Wells
Indigenous
description Staples theory has been used as a framework to explain the historical establishment and political economy of Canada and other “new” countries, based on the concept that Canada has been and continues to be built on an economy of resource extraction. The theory has been applied on both a macro and a micro scale to regions of Canada that have specialized in the extraction of cod, wheat, fur, and oil and gas. Two foundational academics of staples theory, Harold A. Innis and Mel Watkins, spent time in the northern region of Canada now known as the Northwest Territories (NWT) and, among other researchers, applied a staples approach to various periods of the region’s economic development. The application of staples theory in northern Canada, however, is problematic, particularly in view of the territory’s predominantly Indigenous, Inuit, and Métis population. A staples framework tends to ignore, or underplay, a fundamental reality in the NWT: the original political economy of the region was based on Indigenous values of communal trading and sharing in a subsistence economy. Most importantly, the Indigenous economy was controlled and distributed by the Indigenous people as they lived on, and carefully managed, the land and resources of the North. A theoretical approach that centers on the extraction and commodification of resources in the North by white traders and settlers who take over the land, obscures the critical questions of who owns and cares for the land and how it is ‘developed’. Graduate
author2 Lawson, James Charles Barkley
format Thesis
author Bush, Donna
author_facet Bush, Donna
author_sort Bush, Donna
title Staples theory, oil, and indigenous alternative development in the Northwest Territories
title_short Staples theory, oil, and indigenous alternative development in the Northwest Territories
title_full Staples theory, oil, and indigenous alternative development in the Northwest Territories
title_fullStr Staples theory, oil, and indigenous alternative development in the Northwest Territories
title_full_unstemmed Staples theory, oil, and indigenous alternative development in the Northwest Territories
title_sort staples theory, oil, and indigenous alternative development in the northwest territories
publishDate 2017
url https://dspace.library.uvic.ca//handle/1828/8947
long_lat ENVELOPE(-126.833,-126.833,65.282,65.282)
ENVELOPE(-67.086,-67.086,-66.354,-66.354)
geographic Canada
Norman Wells
Northwest Territories
Watkins
geographic_facet Canada
Norman Wells
Northwest Territories
Watkins
genre inuit
Northwest Territories
genre_facet inuit
Northwest Territories
op_relation https://dspace.library.uvic.ca//handle/1828/8947
op_rights Available to the World Wide Web
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