Refracting the State through Human-Fish Relations: Fishing, Indigenous Legal Orders and Colonialism in North/Western Canada

Considers Aboriginal worldviews around the relationships humans have with, and the responsibilities they have to non- or more-than-human entities as a framework for environmental activism, opposition to resource extraction, and government regulation. Asserts that a re-examination of the way that humans connect to our non-human relations is necessary for survivance.
Author/Creator
Zoe Todd
Open Access
Yes
Primary Source
No
Citation
Decolonization, vol. 7, no. 1, Indigenous Peoples and the Politics of Water, 2018, pp. 60-75
Publication Date
2018
First Nation, Metis, Inuit Locations
Resource Type
Articles -- Scholarly, peer reviewed
Format
Text -- PDF
Language
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