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Decolonizing Development in Diné Bikeyah 巴勒斯坦的非殖民化发展
IF 1.3 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES Pub Date : 2018-09-01 DOI: 10.3167/ARES.2018.090103
Melanie K. Yazzie
In this article, I examine the anti-capitalist and antidevelopment politics that Diné resisters espouse in their critiques of resource extraction in the Navajo Nation. I argue that existing anthropological and historical studies about Diné resistance minimize the specifically anti-capitalist character of this resistance by erasing the capitalist underpinnings of development. I draw from Indigenous feminists, Native studies scholars, and Diné land defenders to argue that development in the form of resource extraction is a violent modality of capitalism that seeks to kill Diné life. In response to this death drive, Diné resisters have created a politics of relational life to challenge and oppose development. I examine the historical and material conditions that have given rise to this politics of relational life and suggest its central role in invigorating anticapitalist decolonization struggles.
在这篇文章中,我研究了反资本主义和反发展的政治,这些政治在纳瓦霍民族的资源开采的批评中得到了抵制者的支持。我认为,现有的关于din抵抗运动的人类学和历史研究通过抹去发展的资本主义基础,将这种抵抗运动的具体反资本主义特征最小化。我从土著女权主义者、土著研究学者和土著土地捍卫者的观点中得出结论,认为以资源开采为形式的发展是一种暴力的资本主义模式,它试图杀死土著的生命。为了应对这种死亡驱动,抵抗者创造了一种关系生活的政治来挑战和反对发展。我考察了产生这种关系生活政治的历史和物质条件,并提出了它在振兴反资本主义非殖民化斗争中的核心作用。
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引用次数: 25
Contradictions of Solidarity 团结的矛盾
IF 1.3 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES Pub Date : 2018-09-01 DOI: 10.3167/ARES.2018.090110
Joe Curnow, A. Helferty
In this article, we trace the racialized history of the environmental movement in the United States and Canada that has defined the mainstream movement as a default white space. We then interrogate the turn to solidarity as a way to escape/intervene in the racialized and colonial underpinnings of mainstream environmentalism, demonstrating that the practice of solidarity itself depends on these same racial and colonial systems. Given the lack of theorization on solidarity within environmentalism, we draw on examples of solidarity work that bridge place and power and are predicated on disparate social locations, such as in accompaniment or the fair trade movement. We conclude that the contradictions of racialized and colonial solidarity should not preclude settler attempts to engage in solidarity work, but rather become inscribed into environmentalist practices as an ethic of accountability.
在本文中,我们追溯了美国和加拿大环境运动的种族化历史,这些运动将主流运动定义为默认的白色空间。然后,我们质问转向团结作为一种逃避/干预主流环境主义的种族化和殖民主义基础的方式,表明团结的实践本身依赖于这些相同的种族和殖民制度。鉴于环境保护主义内部缺乏团结的理论化,我们借鉴了团结工作的例子,这些团结工作架起了地方和权力的桥梁,并以不同的社会场所为基础,例如在伴奏或公平贸易运动中。我们的结论是,种族化和殖民地团结的矛盾不应排除定居者参与团结工作的企图,而应作为一种负责任的伦理而成为环境保护主义实践的一部分。
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引用次数: 25
Mino-Mnaamodzawin Mino Mnaamodzawin
IF 1.3 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES Pub Date : 2018-09-01 DOI: 10.3167/ARES.2018.090102
D. Mcgregor
This article explores the potential for advancing environmental justice (EJ) theory and practice through engaging with Indigenous intellectual traditions. When EJ is grounded in Indigenous epistemological and ontological foundations, a distinct EJ framework emerges, leading to a deeper understanding of Indigenous EJ and to a renewed vision for achieving it. I highlight the emergence of the Anishinaabe philosophy referred to as mino-mnaamodzawin (“living well” or “the good life”), common to several Indigenous epistemologies, that considers the critical importance of mutually respectful and beneficial relationships among not only peoples but all our relations (including all living things and many entities not considered by Western society as living, such as water and Earth itself). Mino-mnaamodzawin is suggested as a foundational contributor to a new ethical standard of conduct that will be required if society is to begin engaging in appropriate relationships with all of Creation, thereby establishing a sustainable and just world.
本文探讨了通过融入土著知识传统来推进环境正义理论和实践的潜力。当EJ以土著认识论和本体论基础为基础时,一个独特的EJ框架就会出现,从而导致对土著EJ的更深层次的理解和实现它的新愿景。我强调了被称为mino-mnaamodzawin(“生活得好”或“美好生活”)的Anishinaabe哲学的出现,这种哲学在几个土著认识论中很常见,它认为相互尊重和有益的关系至关重要,不仅在人民之间,而且在我们所有的关系(包括所有生物和许多西方社会不认为是生命的实体,比如水和地球本身)之间。Mino-mnaamodzawin被认为是一种新的道德行为标准的基础贡献者,如果社会要开始与所有创造物建立适当的关系,从而建立一个可持续和公正的世界,这将是必需的。
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引用次数: 61
Righting Names 复原的名字
IF 1.3 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES Pub Date : 2018-09-01 DOI: 10.3167/ARES.2018.090107
Rebekah Sinclair
Controlling the names of places, environments, and species is one way in which settler colonial ontologies delimit the intelligibility of ecological relations, Indigenous peoples, and environmental injustices. To counter this, this article amplifies the voices of Native American scholars and foregrounds a philosophical account of Indigenous naming. First, I explore some central characteristics of Indigenous ontology, epistemic virtue, and ethical responsibility, setting the stage for how Native naming draws these elements together into a complete, robust philosophy. Then I point toward leadingbut contingent principles of Native naming, foregrounding how Native names emerge from and create communities by situating (rather than individuating) the beings thatthey name within kinship structures, including human and nonhuman agents. Finally, I outline why and how Indigenous names and the knowledges they contain are crucial for both resisting settler violence and achieving environmental justice, not only for Native Americans, but for their entire animate communities.
控制地点、环境和物种的名称是殖民者殖民本体界定生态关系、土著人民和环境不公正的可理解性的一种方式。为了解决这个问题,这篇文章放大了美国土著学者的声音,并强调了对土著命名的哲学解释。首先,我探讨了土著本体论、认知美德和伦理责任的一些核心特征,为土著命名如何将这些元素结合成一个完整的、健全的哲学奠定了基础。然后,我指出了土著命名的主要但偶然的原则,强调了土著名字是如何通过将他们命名的生物置于亲属关系结构中(而不是个性化)而产生和创造社区的,包括人类和非人类的代理人。最后,我概述了土著人的名字和他们所包含的知识为什么以及如何对抵抗定居者的暴力和实现环境正义至关重要,不仅对美洲土著人,而且对他们整个充满活力的社区都是如此。
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引用次数: 3
Hunting for Justice 寻求正义
IF 1.3 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES Pub Date : 2018-09-01 DOI: 10.3167/ARES.2018.090106
Lauren Eichler, D. Baumeister
Within the mainstream environmental movement, regulated hunting is commonly defended as a tool for preserving and managing populations of wild animals for future generations. We argue that this justification, encapsulated in the seven principles of the North American Model of Wildlife Conservation, perpetuates settler colonialism—an institutional and theoretical apparatus that systemically eliminates Indigenous peoples, expropriates Indigenous lands, and disqualifies Indigenous worldviews— insofar as it manifests an anthropocentric ideology that objectifies huntedanimals as “natural resources” to be extracted. Because this ideology is antithetical to Indigenous views, its imposition through hunting regulation interrupts Indigenous lifeways, contributing to the destruction of Indigenous identity.
在主流环保运动中,受监管的狩猎通常被认为是为子孙后代保护和管理野生动物种群的工具。我们认为,这种包含在北美野生动物保护模式七项原则中的理由,使定居者殖民主义永久化——一种制度和理论机构,系统地消灭土著人民,征用土著土地,并取消了土著世界观的资格——因为它体现了一种以人类为中心的意识形态,将狩猎动物物化为待开采的“自然资源”。由于这种意识形态与土著人的观点背道而驰,通过狩猎法规强加的这种意识形态打断了土著人的生活方式,助长了对土著身份的破坏。
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引用次数: 29
Fighting Invasive Infrastructures 对抗入侵性基础设施
IF 1.3 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES Pub Date : 2018-09-01 DOI: 10.3167/ARES.2018.090104
A. Spice
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.
在所谓加拿大的移民殖民背景下,石油和天然气项目是当代入侵的基础设施。本文追踪了“关键基础设施”的国家话语如何将石油和天然气工业造成的环境破坏自然化,同时将土著抵抗定为犯罪。我回顾了人类学工作,以分析基础设施概念在土著反对资源开采的斗争中的适用性。根据在反对管道建设的土著土地防御运动中进行的实地调查,我提出了一种基础设施的替代方法,这种方法可以加强和支持人类和非人类关系网络,继续使土著人民的生存成为可能。
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引用次数: 70
Settler Colonialism, Ecology, and Environmental Injustice 殖民者殖民主义、生态与环境不公正
IF 1.3 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES Pub Date : 2018-09-01 DOI: 10.3167/ARES.2018.090109
K. Whyte
Settler colonialism is a form of domination that violently disrupts human relationships with the environment. Settler colonialism is ecological domination, committing environmental injustice against Indigenous peoples and other groups. Focusing on the context of Indigenous peoples’ facing US domination, this article investigates philosophically one dimension of how settler colonialism commits environmental injustice. When examined ecologically, settler colonialism works strategically to undermine Indigenous peoples’ social resilience as self determining collectives. To understand the relationships connecting settler colonialism, environmental injustice, and violence, the article first engages Anishinaabe intellectual traditions to describe an Indigenous conception of social resilience called collective continuance. One way in which settler colonial violence commits environmental injustice is through strategically undermining Indigenous collective continuance. At least two kinds of environmental injustices demonstrate such violence: vicious sedimentation and insidious loops. The article seeks to contribute to knowledge of how anti-Indigenous settler colonialism and environmental injustice are connected.
定居者殖民主义是一种暴力破坏人类与环境关系的统治形式。定居者殖民主义是生态统治,对土著人民和其他群体实施环境不公正。本文聚焦于原住民面对美国统治的背景,从哲学的角度探讨移民殖民主义如何造成环境不公正。从生态学的角度来看,定居者殖民主义在战略上破坏了土著人民作为自决集体的社会弹性。为了理解定居者殖民主义、环境不公正和暴力之间的关系,本文首先利用Anishinaabe的知识传统来描述一种称为集体延续的土著社会弹性概念。移民殖民暴力造成环境不公正的一种方式是通过战略性地破坏土著集体的延续。至少有两种环境不公正表现出这种暴力:恶性沉积和阴险的循环。本文旨在帮助了解反土著定居者殖民主义与环境不公正之间的关系。
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引用次数: 255
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