New Relationships on the Northwest Frontier: Episodes in the Gitxsan and Witsuwit'en Encounter with Colonial Power

dc.contributor.advisorWood, Patricia Katharine
dc.creatorMcCreary, Tyler Allan
dc.date.accessioned2015-08-28T14:37:50Z
dc.date.available2015-08-28T14:37:50Z
dc.date.copyright2013-12-12
dc.date.issued2015-08-28
dc.date.updated2015-08-28T14:37:50Z
dc.degree.disciplineGeography
dc.degree.levelDoctoral
dc.degree.namePhD - Doctor of Philosophy
dc.description.abstractThis dissertation examines relationships between colonialism and Indigenous peoples that shape the development of extractive resources in Gitxsan and Witsuwit’en territories in Northwest British Columbia, Canada. I argue colonialism and Indigeneity are co-constituted. Theoretically, this dissertation brings an analysis of colonialism into conversation with Foucauldian understandings of sovereign, disciplinary, and governmental power. I begin by situating the relationship between colonialism and the Gitxsan and Witsuwit’en people historically, then transition to examine in greater detail the contemporary relations unfolding through the courts, traditional knowledge studies, resource governance, and education. I argue the Gitxsan and Witsuwit’en assertions of territory and jurisdiction in the Delgamuukw litigation exposed Indigenous traditions to new forms of colonial discipline and debasement but also induced new regimes of recognition and doctrines of reconciliation. Subsequently, Aboriginal traditional knowledge studies integrated recognition of Indigeneity within the governmental regulation of resource development. However, such recognition has been constrained. Witsuwit’en resistance to the Enbridge Northern Gateway Project highlights the ongoing emergence of Indigenous politics in excess of regulatory integration as traditional. This excess is continually reincorporated into colonial governance processes to resecure development, through not only techniques aimed at protecting Indigenous traditions but also training regimes designed to incorporate Indigenous labour within the industrial economy. Through the dissertation, I demonstrate the entanglement of resource development with a continuous cycle moving through moments of Indigenous contestation, colonial response, and subsequent Indigenous challenges. This cycle has relied on the exercise of sovereignty, disciplinarity, and governmentality as distinct yet interpenetrated modalities of colonial power. Colonial sovereignty operates to suspend the political excess of Indigenous political claims, discipline works to enframe Indigeneity, and government minimally regulates to protect and foster Indigenous being. However, on the basis that Indigenous forms of territory and subjectivity remain unreconciled with colonial regimes of discipline and governmentality, Indigenous authorities perpetually advance new jurisdictional claims that problematize those of the colonial sovereign, and reopen spaces of negotiation. I suggest the movement between moments of resistance and reconciliation remains necessarily open and indeterminate. These multiple trajectories of the encounter between Indigenous peoples and colonialism, I argue, continually unfold to constitute the colonial present.
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10315/29817
dc.language.isoen
dc.rightsAuthor owns copyright, except where explicitly noted. Please contact the author directly with licensing requests.
dc.subjectGeography
dc.subjectNative American studies
dc.subjectLaw
dc.subject.keywordsIndigenous peoples
dc.subject.keywordsAboriginal peoples
dc.subject.keywordsFirst Nations peoples
dc.subject.keywordsColonialism
dc.subject.keywordsSettler colonialism
dc.subject.keywordsFoucault
dc.subject.keywordsPower
dc.subject.keywordsResistance
dc.subject.keywordsReconciliation
dc.subject.keywordsSovereignty
dc.subject.keywordsDiscipline
dc.subject.keywordsGovernmentality
dc.subject.keywordsRegulation
dc.subject.keywordsOntological politics
dc.subject.keywordsAboriginal law
dc.subject.keywordsAboriginal title
dc.subject.keywordsAboriginal traditional knowledge
dc.subject.keywordsTraditional use
dc.subject.keywordsTraditional knowledge
dc.subject.keywordsTraditional ecological knowledge
dc.subject.keywordsResource governance
dc.subject.keywordsEnvironmental governance
dc.subject.keywordsPipelines
dc.subject.keywordsEnergy
dc.subject.keywordsEducation
dc.subject.keywordsAboriginal education
dc.subject.keywordsIndigenous education
dc.subject.keywordsVocational education
dc.subject.keywordsIndustry education
dc.subject.keywordsMining education.
dc.titleNew Relationships on the Northwest Frontier: Episodes in the Gitxsan and Witsuwit'en Encounter with Colonial Power
dc.typeElectronic Thesis or Dissertationen_US

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