Diamonds are Forever: A Decolonizing, Feminist Approach to Diamond Mining in Yellowknife, Northwest Territories

This dissertation examines the impact of the development of diamond mines in the Yellowknife region, Northwest Territories (NWT), asking two questions: how has the diamond-mining regime affected the gendered social relations in the regional racialized mixed economy? And, how can violence against Ind...

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Main Author: Hall, Rebecca Jane
Other Authors: Vosko, Leah F.
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10315/34474
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spelling ftyorkuniv:oai:yorkspace.library.yorku.ca:10315/34474 2023-05-15T17:46:32+02:00 Diamonds are Forever: A Decolonizing, Feminist Approach to Diamond Mining in Yellowknife, Northwest Territories Hall, Rebecca Jane Vosko, Leah F. 2018-05-28T12:44:15Z application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10315/34474 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/10315/34474 Author owns copyright, except where explicitly noted. Please contact the author directly with licensing requests. Political Science Feminist political economy Resource extraction Diamond mining Northern development Indigenous issues Social reproduction Subsistence Northwest Territories Electronic Thesis or Dissertation 2018 ftyorkuniv 2022-08-22T13:02:09Z This dissertation examines the impact of the development of diamond mines in the Yellowknife region, Northwest Territories (NWT), asking two questions: how has the diamond-mining regime affected the gendered social relations in the regional racialized mixed economy? And, how can violence against Indigenous women living in the region be situated in the context of structural shifts in the mixed economy? The analysis developed in response to these questions is informed by a theorization of the mixed economy as a dynamic set of social relations characterized by tension between the temporal imperatives of capitalist production and the place-based imperatives of subsistence. Taking a decolonizing, feminist political economy (FPE) approach, this dissertation responded to these questions by drawing on documentary analysis, interviews, and talking circles to examine the often invisibilized labour performed by Indigenous women that reproduces the mixed economy. The central contention is that the diamond-mining regime represents a new imposition upon daily and intergenerational social reproduction performed by Indigenous women, an imposition that is sometimes violent, and that is met with resistance. The dissertation unfolds in six substantive chapters. Building on a theoretical and historical grounding offered in chapters one and two, chapters three-five draw on field research to examine shifts in local relations of capitalist production, social reproduction, and subsistence production. The analysis reveals that the Fly-In-Fly-Out (FIFO) diamond-mining regime, itself a spatial articulation of the capitalist separation between (masculinized) capitalist production and (feminized) social reproduction, introduces, or, in some cases, intensifies a nuclear male-breadwinner/female-caregiver structure. Woven through this analysis is an examination of the relationship between structural and embodied violence. Indeed, the structural shifts imposed by the diamond-mining regime characterized in this dissertation as structural ... Thesis Northwest Territories Yellowknife York University, Toronto: YorkSpace Northwest Territories Yellowknife
institution Open Polar
collection York University, Toronto: YorkSpace
op_collection_id ftyorkuniv
language English
topic Political Science
Feminist political economy
Resource extraction
Diamond mining
Northern development
Indigenous issues
Social reproduction
Subsistence
Northwest Territories
spellingShingle Political Science
Feminist political economy
Resource extraction
Diamond mining
Northern development
Indigenous issues
Social reproduction
Subsistence
Northwest Territories
Hall, Rebecca Jane
Diamonds are Forever: A Decolonizing, Feminist Approach to Diamond Mining in Yellowknife, Northwest Territories
topic_facet Political Science
Feminist political economy
Resource extraction
Diamond mining
Northern development
Indigenous issues
Social reproduction
Subsistence
Northwest Territories
description This dissertation examines the impact of the development of diamond mines in the Yellowknife region, Northwest Territories (NWT), asking two questions: how has the diamond-mining regime affected the gendered social relations in the regional racialized mixed economy? And, how can violence against Indigenous women living in the region be situated in the context of structural shifts in the mixed economy? The analysis developed in response to these questions is informed by a theorization of the mixed economy as a dynamic set of social relations characterized by tension between the temporal imperatives of capitalist production and the place-based imperatives of subsistence. Taking a decolonizing, feminist political economy (FPE) approach, this dissertation responded to these questions by drawing on documentary analysis, interviews, and talking circles to examine the often invisibilized labour performed by Indigenous women that reproduces the mixed economy. The central contention is that the diamond-mining regime represents a new imposition upon daily and intergenerational social reproduction performed by Indigenous women, an imposition that is sometimes violent, and that is met with resistance. The dissertation unfolds in six substantive chapters. Building on a theoretical and historical grounding offered in chapters one and two, chapters three-five draw on field research to examine shifts in local relations of capitalist production, social reproduction, and subsistence production. The analysis reveals that the Fly-In-Fly-Out (FIFO) diamond-mining regime, itself a spatial articulation of the capitalist separation between (masculinized) capitalist production and (feminized) social reproduction, introduces, or, in some cases, intensifies a nuclear male-breadwinner/female-caregiver structure. Woven through this analysis is an examination of the relationship between structural and embodied violence. Indeed, the structural shifts imposed by the diamond-mining regime characterized in this dissertation as structural ...
author2 Vosko, Leah F.
format Thesis
author Hall, Rebecca Jane
author_facet Hall, Rebecca Jane
author_sort Hall, Rebecca Jane
title Diamonds are Forever: A Decolonizing, Feminist Approach to Diamond Mining in Yellowknife, Northwest Territories
title_short Diamonds are Forever: A Decolonizing, Feminist Approach to Diamond Mining in Yellowknife, Northwest Territories
title_full Diamonds are Forever: A Decolonizing, Feminist Approach to Diamond Mining in Yellowknife, Northwest Territories
title_fullStr Diamonds are Forever: A Decolonizing, Feminist Approach to Diamond Mining in Yellowknife, Northwest Territories
title_full_unstemmed Diamonds are Forever: A Decolonizing, Feminist Approach to Diamond Mining in Yellowknife, Northwest Territories
title_sort diamonds are forever: a decolonizing, feminist approach to diamond mining in yellowknife, northwest territories
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/10315/34474
geographic Northwest Territories
Yellowknife
geographic_facet Northwest Territories
Yellowknife
genre Northwest Territories
Yellowknife
genre_facet Northwest Territories
Yellowknife
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10315/34474
op_rights Author owns copyright, except where explicitly noted. Please contact the author directly with licensing requests.
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