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  • Online Resource  (5)
  • SAGE Publications  (5)
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  • Online Resource  (5)
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  • SAGE Publications  (5)
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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    SAGE Publications ; 2014
    In:  cultural geographies Vol. 21, No. 1 ( 2014-01), p. 115-129
    In: cultural geographies, SAGE Publications, Vol. 21, No. 1 ( 2014-01), p. 115-129
    Abstract: This paper examines the ontological politics of an encounter between proposed energy pipelines and Indigenous peoples. The Enbridge Corporation has applied to construct a pipeline system to deliver diluted bitumen from the Alberta tar sands to the Pacific coast of British Columbia, but the Carrier Sekani Tribal Council and their member communities have asserted the authority to prevent this project from passing through their unceded territories. Studying Carrier Sekani contestation of Canadian regulatory assessment of the Enbridge Northern Gateway Project, we examine how the processes of Indigenous becoming exceed notions of Indigenous being that are included in the permitting process as traditional knowledge. We focus both on the performance of legal obligations to consider Aboriginal traditional knowledge and the emerging politics of Carrier Sekani resistance. Our intention is not to question the integrity of traditional knowledge that the regulatory process incorporates, but to highlight how traditional knowledge functions as an anchor for a field of governmental inquiry and action. Providing a historical and geographical context of Carrier Sekani relations with development and the state, we argue that the coding of Indigenous being as traditional works to disavow contemporary processes of Indigenous becoming that are surplus to the spatial ontology of capitalist energy development for global markets. Against efforts to sanction development on disputed territory through formal recognition of a constrained Indigeneity, Carrier Sekani people assert the sovereign authority to prevent or permit development on their lands and waterways using traditional governance systems. Broadly, this paper suggests that recognizing the ontological politics at stake in this permitting process provides a useful opening to understand continued colonial captures at work in the inclusion of traditional knowledge in environmental governance. But it also demonstrates the capacity of Indigenous resistance to these enclosures to challenge and reshape global geographies of energy, capitalism, and climate.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 1474-4740 , 1477-0881
    Language: English
    Publisher: SAGE Publications
    Publication Date: 2014
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 2094185-7
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    SAGE Publications ; 2021
    In:  Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space Vol. 39, No. 7 ( 2021-11), p. 1586-1605
    In: Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space, SAGE Publications, Vol. 39, No. 7 ( 2021-11), p. 1586-1605
    Abstract: Recent scholarship on environmental justice highlights a concern about the relationship between the racial state and social movement strategy. This paper addresses the ingenuity of environmental justice organizing in the Proctor Creek and South River watersheds of Atlanta, Georgia, each home to predominantly Black communities and unjust flows of toxicants and sewage through urban creeks, streams, and rivers. We begin from critiques of the failure of institutionalized environmental justice and the state’s role in maintaining environmental racisms. To examine organizing responses to these circumstances, we analyze the improvisational politics of social movements in the context of the racial state, theoretically drawing from Charles Lee’s Ingenious Citizenship (2016). Empirically investigating the work of Atlanta community organizers, we emphasize pathways of strategic innovation among environmental justice organizers that improvise against the racial state even while negotiating with it. The article presents evidence of organizers challenging dominant modes of quantifying environmental injustice, appropriating and repurposing the language of environmental restoration, and improvising in the spaces of environmental governance. While state recognition has sought to contain or co-opt movements, we demonstrate the continuing vitality of mobilizations that simultaneously make demands of the state and rupture the governing forms of knowledge and practice that reinforce environmental racisms.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 2399-6544 , 2399-6552
    Language: English
    Publisher: SAGE Publications
    Publication Date: 2021
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 2879408-4
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  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    SAGE Publications ; 2021
    In:  cultural geographies Vol. 28, No. 3 ( 2021-07), p. 574-574
    In: cultural geographies, SAGE Publications, Vol. 28, No. 3 ( 2021-07), p. 574-574
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 1474-4740 , 1477-0881
    Language: English
    Publisher: SAGE Publications
    Publication Date: 2021
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 2094185-7
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  • 4
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    SAGE Publications ; 2021
    In:  Qualitative Social Work Vol. 20, No. 6 ( 2021-11), p. 1496-1516
    In: Qualitative Social Work, SAGE Publications, Vol. 20, No. 6 ( 2021-11), p. 1496-1516
    Abstract: On March 3, 2019, an EF4 tornado devastated the rural Alabama communities of Beauregard and Smith Station, killing 23 people and causing direct injuries to another 97. This storm was unusually devastating, with twice the predicted casualty rate based on the tornado’s power, the impacted population, and impacted housing stock. In this paper, we apply qualitative methods from anthropology, geography, and planning to better understand the social context of this unusually devastating tornado. Recognizing that there are multiple formulations of the problem of disasters, we aim to highlight how interdisciplinary qualitative research can deepen our understanding of tornado disasters. Combining policy analysis, political economic critique, and ethnographic description, we seek to showcase how qualitative research enables us to interrogate and reimagine the problem of disasters. Rather than simply juxtaposing qualitative and quantitative methods, we emphasize how the heterogeneity of qualitative research methods can strengthen interdisciplinary research projects by generating dialogue about the multiple contexts relevant to understanding a social problem. While problem definition remains a central challenge to establishing a dialogue between anthropology and social work, here, we intend to extend this discussion to larger interdisciplinary collaborations. Situating the issue of problem formation within a broader ecology of qualitative inquiry, we highlight how dialogue about problem definition can, itself, produce meaningful insights into how we understand disasters.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 1473-3250 , 1741-3117
    Language: English
    Publisher: SAGE Publications
    Publication Date: 2021
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 2073436-0
    SSG: 3,4
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  • 5
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    SAGE Publications ; 2021
    In:  cultural geographies Vol. 28, No. 1 ( 2021-01), p. 41-55
    In: cultural geographies, SAGE Publications, Vol. 28, No. 1 ( 2021-01), p. 41-55
    Abstract: Black thought has long emphasized the vital importance of aesthetic politics to Black activism and community life. Recent scholarship has emphasized the importance of analyzing the aesthetic geographies of festivals. In this paper, we extend the discussion of festival geographies through theoretical engagement with Black thought and empirical engagement with Black parades in the US South. Specifically, we use an examination of the aesthetic geographies of Florida A & M University’s Marching 100 to think through the relationships between form and improvisation, performance and belonging and affirmative aesthetic politics. Following Black scholars, we show that Black aesthetic geographies work to counter the normative containment and erasure of Black spatiality in a white supremacist society. We demonstrate that Black aesthetic practices act as a refusal of this containment and erasure, disrupting normative geographies of whiteness and asserting Black socio-spatial presence and relations of belonging that affirm Black life.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 1474-4740 , 1477-0881
    Language: English
    Publisher: SAGE Publications
    Publication Date: 2021
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 2094185-7
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