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Anatomy of Place: Ecological Citizenship in Canada's Chemical Valley.

机译:地方剖析:加拿大化学谷的生态公民身份。

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摘要

Citizens of the Aamjiwnaang First Nation fight for justice with their bodies at the frontlines of environmental catastrophe. This dissertation employs a biopolitical and interpretive analysis to examine these struggles in the polluted heart of Canada's 'Chemical Valley'. Drawing from a discursive analysis of situated concerns on the ground and a textual analysis of Canada's biopolitical 'policy ensemble' for Indigenous citizenship, this dissertation examines how citizens and public officials respond to environmental and reproductive injustices in Aamjiwnaang. Based upon in-depth interviews with residents and policy-makers, I first document citizens of the Aamjiwnaang First Nation's activities and practices on the ground as they cope with and navigate their health concerns and habitat. Second, I examine struggles over knowledge and the contestation over scientific expertise as the community seeks reproductive justice. Third, I contextualize citizen struggles over knowledge by discussing the power relations embedded within the 'policy ensemble' for Indigenous citizenship and Canadian jurisdiction for on-reserve environmental health. From an interpretive lens, inspired by Foucault's concepts of biopower and governmentality, the dissertation develops a framework of "ecological citizenship", which confronts biopolitics with a theoretical discussion of place to expand upon existing Canadian citizenship and environmental studies literature. I argue that reproductive justice in Aamjiwnaang cannot be separated from environmental justice, and that the concept of place is central to ongoing struggles. As such, I discuss "ecological citizenship's double-edge", to contend that citizens are at once bound up within disciplinary biopolitical power relations and also articulate a radical form of place-based belonging.
机译:Aamjiwnaang原住民的公民为争取正义而斗争,他们的身体处于环境灾难的最前沿。本文运用生物政治学和解释学的分析方法研究了加拿大“化学谷”污染中心的这些斗争。本文从对当地问题的话语分析和对加拿大土著公民生物政治“政策合奏”的文本分析中汲取了经验,本文研究了公民和公职人员如何应对Aamjiwnaang地区的环境和生殖不公。在与居民和政策制定者进行深入访谈的基础上,我首先记录了Aamjiwnaang原住民在当地应对和应对健康问题和栖息地时的活动和做法。其次,我研究了在社会寻求生殖正义的过程中,由于知识而进行的斗争以及由于科学专门知识而引起的争论。第三,我通过讨论土著人民的“政策合奏”和加拿大保留自然环境管辖权中的权力关系,将公民在知识上的斗争情境化。从一个解释的角度出发,受福柯的生物权力和政府性概念启发,本文建立了一个“生态公民身份”框架,该框架与生物政治学对立,展开了关于如何扩展现有加拿大公民身份和环境研究文献的理论讨论。我认为,Aamjiwnaang的生殖正义不能与环境正义分开,而且场所概念对于正在进行的斗争至关重要。因此,我讨论了“生态公民权的双重优势”,以主张公民立即受学科生物政治权力关系的束缚,并明确表达了一种基于场所的归属的激进形式。

著录项

  • 作者

    Wiebe, Sarah.;

  • 作者单位

    University of Ottawa (Canada).;

  • 授予单位 University of Ottawa (Canada).;
  • 学科 Sociology Environmental Justice.;Political Science General.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2013
  • 页码 287 p.
  • 总页数 287
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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