采掘、原住民剥夺与国家权力:立岩与湿湿抵抗的教训

Paarth Mittal
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引用次数: 1

摘要

当土著领导的对土地和水资源破坏项目的抵抗威胁到开采时,移民-殖民国家和公司机构就会使用安全机制来消除这种“威胁”。本文以加拿大不列颠哥伦比亚省(BC) Wet 'suwet 'en民族(特别是Unist 'ot 'en阵营)抵制沿海天然气管道(CGL)的管道冲突,以及美国北达科他州立岩苏部落(Standing Rock Sioux Tribe)抵制达科他输油管道(DAPL)的管道冲突为例,探讨了化石燃料开采如何与关键基础设施(CI)证券化相互作用,从而进一步剥夺土著土地。我认为,尽管Wet 'suwet 'en和Standing Rock案例都涉及到州政府和企业将原住民抵抗开采定为犯罪——以维护化石燃料资本的利益——但Wet 'suwet 'en案例是独一无二的,因为加拿大行动者试图通过象征性地呼吁原住民权利来平息抵抗。世界各地的土著社区因为和平地捍卫他们的水、土地和社区而受到暴力压迫。但是,暴力的动机和策略对于每一个行使暴力的殖民管辖区和每一个受影响的土著社区来说都是独特的。我通过对老虎天鹅监视和BC省最高法院禁令文件的深入内容分析,比较和对比了这两个案例的基本原理和策略。我在关于剥夺和证券化的理论辩论中讨论了我的发现。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Extraction, Indigenous Dispossession and State Power: Lessons from Standing Rock and Wet’suwet’en Resistance
When Indigenous-led resistance to land- and water-killing projects threatens extraction, settler-colonial state and corporate institutions use security mechanisms to eliminate such “threats.” Using as case studies the pipeline conflicts of the Wet’suwet’en Nation’s (especially Unist’ot’en Camp’s) resistance to Coastal GasLink (CGL) in British Columbia (BC), Canada, and the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe’s resistance to the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL) in North Dakota, United States (US), this paper explores how fossil-fuel extraction interacts with critical infrastructure (CI) securitization to further Indigenous land dispossession. I argue that although the Wet’suwet’en and Standing Rock cases both involved the state and corporations criminalizing Indigenous resistance to extraction—to uphold fossil-fuel capital interests—the Wet’suwet’en case is unique because Canadian actors attempted to pacify resistance through symbolic appeals to Indigenous rights. Indigenous communities across the world are violently oppressed for peacefully defending their water, land, and communities. However, the motives and strategies of violence are unique for every colonial jurisdiction exercising violence, and for every Indigenous community impacted. I compare and contrast the rationales and strategiesof both cases through an in-depth content analysis of passages from TigerSwan surveillance and BC Supreme Court injunction documents. I discuss my findings within theoretical debates on dispossession and securitization.  
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