Publication | Closed Access
Fighting Invasive Infrastructures
162
Citations
26
References
2018
Year
ColonialismNative Environmental SovereigntyIndigenous PeopleIndigenous MovementEnvironmental PlanningSocial SciencesPolitical EcologyIndigenous StudySettler ColonialismInvasive SpecieInvasive SpeciesIndigenous HistorySettler Colonial ContextIndigenous GovernanceLanguage StudiesGeopoliticsGas ProjectsIndigenous HeritageInfrastructure SecurityGeographyEnvironmental HistoryIndigenous FeminismsIndigenous RightsInvasion BiologyIndigenous Knowledge SystemsNatural Resource ManagementIndigenous StudiesInvasive InfrastructuresIndigenous ResistanceAnthropologyCultural Anthropology
In the settler colonial context of so-called Canada, oil and gas projects are contemporary infrastructures of invasion. This article tracks how the state discourse of “critical infrastructure” naturalizes the environmental destruction wrought by the oil and gas industry while criminalizing Indigenous resistance. I review anthropological work to analyze the applicability of the concept of infrastructure to Indigenous struggles against resource extraction. Drawing on fieldwork conducted in Indigenous land defense movements against pipeline construction, I argue for an alternative approach to infrastructure that strengthens and supports the networks of human and other-than-human relations that continue to make survival possible for Indigenous peoples.
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