Mining, Colonial Legacies, and Neoliberalism: A Political Ecology of Health Knowledge

Scholarship on the health impacts of resource extraction displays prominent gaps and apparent corporate and neocolonial footprints that raise questions about how science is produced. We analyze production of knowledge, on the health impacts of mining, carried out in relation to the Canadian Internat...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Brisbois, Ben (author)
Other Authors: Feagan, Mathieu (author), Stime, Bjorn (author), K. Paz, Isaac (author), Berbes Blázquez, Marta (author), Gaibor, Juan (author), Cole, Donald (author), Di Ruggiero, Erica (author), Hanson, Lori (author), Janes, Craig (author), Plamondon, Katrina (author), Spiegel, Jerry (author), Yassi, Annalee (author)
Format: article
Language:eng
Published: 2021
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Online Access:https://dspace.ueb.edu.ec/handle/123456789/5995
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Summary:Scholarship on the health impacts of resource extraction displays prominent gaps and apparent corporate and neocolonial footprints that raise questions about how science is produced. We analyze production of knowledge, on the health impacts of mining, carried out in relation to the Canadian International Resources and Development Institute (CIRDI), a university-based organization with substantial extractive industry involvement and links to Canada’s mining-dominated foreign policy. We use a “political ecology of knowledge” framework to situate CIRDI in the context of neoliberal capitalism, neocolonial sustainable development discourses, and mining industry corporate social responsibility techniques. We then document the interactions of specific health disciplinary conventions and knowledges within CIRDI-related research and advocacy efforts involving a major Canadian global health organization. This analysis illustrates both accommodation and resistance to large-scale political economic structures and the need to directly confront the global North governments and sectors pushing extractive-led neoliberal development globally.