Amazon cover image
Image from Amazon.com

Pipeline dreams : people, environment, and the Arctic energy frontier/ Mark Nuttall.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: IWGIA document ; 126.Publication details: Copenhagen : International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs, 2010.Description: 223 p. : 2 maps ; 21 cmISBN:
  • 9788791563867
  • 8791563860
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • QH545.H92 N88 2010
Contents:
Introduction -- The Arctic energy frontier -- Treaties, land claims and Berger's legecy -- The Mackenzie Gas Project and Canada's energy future -- The Alaska Highway Gas Pipeline and the last wilderness -- Water, the thick black oil and the gateway to Asia.
Summary: Interest in the Arctic as one of the world’s last energy frontiers is increasing. The indigenous peoples of the circumpolar North have long been involved in struggles to make sense of, adapt to, and negotiate the impacts and consequences of resource development, but they have also been involved in struggles to gain some measure of control over development as well as to benefit from it. With a focus on the North American Arctic, Pipeline Dreams discusses how dreams of extracting resource wealth have been significant in influencing and shaping relations between indigenous and non-indigenous peoples, as well as for the opening up of northern frontier regions to economic development. Pipeline Dreams looks at the emergence of the circumpolar North as an imagined hydrocarbon province and, through a detailed discussion of plans to explore for oil and gas and to build pipelines across the Arctic and Subarctic lands, it discusses a number of case studies from Canada and Alaska, as well as from other circumpolar regions, which illustrate some of the diverse perspectives, interests and concerns of indigenous peoples. The book considers and reflects upon the idea of the Arctic as a resource frontier and the concerns expressed by a variety of groups and commentators over the social and environmental impacts of oil and gas development, as well as the opportunities that oil and gas activities may bring to both the long-term viability of indigenous and local communities, and to the sustainability of indigenous and local livelihoods, cultures, and societies.
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
Star ratings
    Average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Books Books KNCHR Library General Stacks Non-Fiction QH545.H92 N88 2010 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available MKT01169
Total holds: 0

Includes bibliography (p. 208-218).

Introduction -- The Arctic energy frontier -- Treaties, land claims and Berger's legecy -- The Mackenzie Gas Project and Canada's energy future -- The Alaska Highway Gas Pipeline and the last wilderness -- Water, the thick black oil and the gateway to Asia.

Interest in the Arctic as one of the world’s last energy frontiers is increasing. The indigenous peoples of the circumpolar North have long been involved in struggles to make sense of, adapt to, and negotiate the impacts and consequences of resource development, but they have also been involved in struggles to gain some measure of control over development as well as to benefit from it.

With a focus on the North American Arctic, Pipeline Dreams discusses how dreams of extracting resource wealth have been significant in influencing and shaping relations between indigenous and non-indigenous peoples, as well as for the opening up of northern frontier regions to economic development. Pipeline Dreams looks at the emergence of the circumpolar North as an imagined hydrocarbon province and, through a detailed discussion of plans to explore for oil and gas and to build pipelines across the Arctic and Subarctic lands, it discusses a number of case studies from Canada and Alaska, as well as from other circumpolar regions, which illustrate some of the diverse perspectives, interests and concerns of indigenous peoples.

The book considers and reflects upon the idea of the Arctic as a resource frontier and the concerns expressed by a variety of groups and commentators over the social and environmental impacts of oil and gas development, as well as the opportunities that oil and gas activities may bring to both the long-term viability of indigenous and local communities, and to the sustainability of indigenous and local livelihoods, cultures, and societies.

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.
©2019 KNCHR Library - Open Public Access Catalogue

Powered by Koha