Mcgill-queen's University Press
Extractive Industry and the Sustainability of Canada’s Arctic Communities
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About this book
Modern treaties, increased self-government, new environmental assessment rules, co-management bodies, and increased recognition and respect of Indigenous rights make it possible for northern communities to exert some control over extractive industries. Whether these industries can increase the well-being and sustainability of Canada’s Arctic communities, however, is still open to question.
Extractive Industry and the Sustainability of Canada’s Arctic Communities delves into the final research findings of the Resources and Sustainable Development in the Arctic project which attempted to determine what was required for extractive industry to benefit northern communities. Drawing on case studies, this book explores how northern communities can capture and distribute a fairer share of financial benefits, how they can use extractive activities for business development, the problems and possibilities of employment and training opportunities, and the impacts on gender relations. It also considers fly-in fly-out work patterns, subsistence activities, housing, post-mine clean-up activities, waste management, and ways of monitoring positive and negative impacts. While extractive industries could potentially help improve the sustainability of Canada’s Arctic, many issues stand in the way, most notably power imbalances that limit the ability of Indigenous Peoples to equitably participate in their governance.
Extractive Industry and the Sustainability of Canada’s Arctic Communities emphasizes the general need to determine how new institutions and processes, which are largely imported from the south, can be adapted to allow for a more authentic participation from the Indigenous Peoples of Canada’s Arctic.
Author / Editor information
Reviews
“This well-written volume addresses challenges common to many Arctic communities with a timely focus on Arctic resource development
and Indigenous lands. It is a thoroughly enjoyable read.” Anne Merrild Hansen, Aalborg University and co-editor of Collaborative Research Methods in the Arctic: Experiences from Greenland
Topics
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Front Matter
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Contents
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Tables and Figures
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Extractive Industry and the Sustainability of Canada’s Arctic Communities: An Introduction
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Resource Revenue Allocation Strategies and Indigenous Community Sustainable Development
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Mining Economies, Mining Families: The Impacts of Extractive Industries on Economic and Human Development in the Eastern Subarctic
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Local Benefits of Education, Training, and Employment with Resource Industries
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Finding Space for Subsistence and Extractive Resource Development in Northern Canada
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The FIFO Social Overlap: Success and Pitfalls of Long-Distance Commuting in the Mining Sector
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Reframing Benefits: Indigenous Women and Resource Governance in Northern Canada
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“It’s a precarious situation”: Situating Housing First Within the Resource Dependent Economy in Yellowknife, Northwest Territorie
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Environmental Legacies: Mine Remediation Policy and Practice in Northern Canada
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Facilitating Sustainable Waste Management in a Northern Community and Resource Development Context at Happy Valley- Goose Bay, Labrador
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The Social Economy and Resource Governance in Nunavut
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Impacts of Mining on Well-Being: A Disconnect between Theory and Practice
278 -
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Measuring the Social and Economic Impacts of Extractive Industry in the Arctic: Developing Baseline Social Indicators for the Inuvialuit Settlement Region
310 -
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Measuring Social Impacts: Building Tools for Understanding Community Well-Being
335 -
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What Must Happen for Extractive Industry to Help the Sustainability of Northern Communities?
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Contributors
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