Care through closure: mine transitions in the mixed economy of the Northwest Territories, Canada

R. Hall, Hannah Ascough
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Abstract

Abstract This article, emerging from a community-university research partnership, examines community concerns around diamond mine closure in the Northwest Territories, Canada, and Dene visions of post-extractive futures. The Northwest Territories is a region of the sub-arctic characterized by a political economy that combines settler and Indigenous modes of governance, production, and social reproduction, with an outsized settler engagement in resource extraction. In this article, we turn our attention to the under-examined social processes of mine closure in this region. In taking a feminist political economy approach to mine closure, we attend to the multiple labours of the northern mixed economy. We aim to unsettle the settler preoccupation with the mine itself, and rather, to centre the social reproduction of mining affected communities. Responding to calls for greater attention to the social aspects of mine closure, this paper brings together feminist imaginaries of care and reproduction with place-based insights regarding the gender of settler colonialism and Indigenous women’s transgressive caring labours in northern Canada. It draws upon community-based interviews and talking circles, analyzing mine closure as both a site of ongoing settler colonial dispossession and as a space of resistance to ongoing colonialism through the assertion of Dene modes of life.
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通过关闭进行护理:加拿大西北地区混合经济中的矿山转型
本文来自社区大学研究合作伙伴关系,研究了加拿大西北地区社区对钻石矿关闭的关注,以及Dene对后开采未来的看法。西北地区是一个亚北极地区,其特点是政治经济结合了定居者和土著的治理、生产和社会再生产模式,并有大量定居者参与资源开采。在本文中,我们将注意力转向该地区未得到充分审查的矿山关闭的社会进程。在采取女权主义的政治经济学方法来解决矿山关闭问题时,我们关注的是北方混合经济中的多重劳动者。我们的目标是消除定居者对矿山本身的关注,更确切地说,是将受采矿影响社区的社会再生产作为中心。为了回应更多关注煤矿关闭的社会方面的呼吁,本文将女权主义者对关怀和生殖的想象与基于地点的见解结合起来,探讨了移民殖民主义的性别和加拿大北部土著妇女的越界关怀劳动。它借鉴了基于社区的访谈和谈话圈,分析了矿井关闭既是一个正在进行的定居者殖民剥夺的地点,也是一个通过主张Dene生活模式来抵抗正在进行的殖民主义的空间。
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