4.0 Article

We have a very colonial way of thinking...: Ontario municipalities' climate collaborations with Indigenous Peoples

相关参考文献

注意:仅列出部分参考文献,下载原文获取全部文献信息。
Article Geography

SETTLER IGNORANCE AND PUBLIC MEMORY: KINGSTON, ONTARIO

Elizabeth Nelson et al.

Summary: This article examines settler-colonial commemorative practice in Canada's context of reconciliation and discusses suggestions for addressing settler ignorance and reimagining places of public memory through conversations with Indigenous peoples.

GEOGRAPHICAL REVIEW (2023)

Article Environmental Studies

Dispossession by municipalization: Property, pipelines, and divisions of power in settler colonial Canada

Jeremy J. Schmidt

Summary: This article examines the impact of municipalization on Indigenous authority and land dispossession, as well as the role of changes in Canadian federalism in municipalization. Using a case study, the article demonstrates how municipalization facilitates the extraction of value from land. The author argues that municipalization is not only a language of critique, but critical to understanding the production of settler colonial space.

ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING C-POLITICS AND SPACE (2022)

Article Public Administration

Overcoming barriers to Indigenous-local water sharing agreements in Canada

Cynthia Huo et al.

Summary: Water sharing agreements have become an important tool for improving water security among First Nations in Canada, but some communities are hesitant to sign them. This article reviews concerns raised by First Nations leaders and examines the extent to which existing agreements address these concerns. Analysis of 40 agreements reveals that while many include provisions to alleviate concerns, some are either unaddressed or insufficiently addressed.

CANADIAN PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION-ADMINISTRATION PUBLIQUE DU CANADA (2022)

Article Geography

The Limits of Liberal Recognition: Racial Capitalism, Settler Colonialism, and Environmental Governance in Vancouver and Atlanta

Tyler McCreary et al.

Summary: Despite increasing recognition of Indigenous and Black environmental concerns in governance processes, settler colonialism and racial capitalism in North America continue to disproportionately burden marginalized communities with environmental harms. Political ecologists must acknowledge the limitations of institutionalized recognition of historically marginalized communities in North American environmental governance. The institutionalization of such concern in environmental governance functions more to avoid historic drivers and geographic processes of marginalization than to disrupt white supremacy and settler colonialism.

ANTIPODE (2021)

Article Environmental Sciences

Examining Collaborative Processes for Climate Change Adaptation in New Brunswick, Canada

Alison Feist et al.

ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT (2020)

Review Green & Sustainable Science & Technology

Cities: The core of climate change mitigation

Zhifu Mi et al.

JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION (2019)

Article Public Administration

From self-determination to service delivery: Assessing Indigenous inclusion in municipal governance in Canada

Joanne Heritz

CANADIAN PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION-ADMINISTRATION PUBLIQUE DU CANADA (2018)

Article Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary

Anti-colonial methodologies and practices for settler colonial studies

Elizabeth Carlson

SETTLER COLONIAL STUDIES (2017)

Article Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary

Thematic Analysis: Striving to Meet the Trustworthiness Criteria

Lorelli S. Nowell et al.

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF QUALITATIVE METHODS (2017)

Article Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary

Working Across Contexts: Practical Considerations of Doing Indigenist/Anti-Colonial Research

Michael A. Hart et al.

QUALITATIVE INQUIRY (2017)

Article Geography

What is a settler-colonial city?

David Hugill

GEOGRAPHY COMPASS (2017)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Paris Agreement climate proposals need a boost to keep warming well below 2 °C

Joeri Rogelj et al.

NATURE (2016)

Article Public Administration

Municipal-Aboriginal advisory committees in four Canadian cities: 1999-2014

Joanne Heritz

CANADIAN PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION-ADMINISTRATION PUBLIQUE DU CANADA (2016)

Article Public Administration

Evaluating the Productivity of Collaborative Governance Regimes: A Performance Matrix

Kirk Emerson et al.

PUBLIC PERFORMANCE & MANAGEMENT REVIEW (2015)

Article Ethnic Studies

LESSONS FOR COLLABORATION INVOLVING TRADITIONAL KNOWLEDGE AND ENVIRONMENTAL GOVERNANCE IN ONTARIO, CANADA

Deborah McGregor

ALTERNATIVE-AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INDIGENOUS PEOPLES (2014)

Article Environmental Studies

Leveling the Playing Field: Fostering Collaborative Governance Towards On-Going Reconciliation

Melanie Zurba

ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY AND GOVERNANCE (2014)

Article Political Science

An Integrative Framework for Collaborative Governance

Kirk Emerson et al.

JOURNAL OF PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION RESEARCH AND THEORY (2012)

Article Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary

Qualitative Quality: Eight Big-Tent Criteria for Excellent Qualitative Research

Sarah J. Tracy

QUALITATIVE INQUIRY (2010)

Article Environmental Studies

You can make a place for it: remapping urban First Nations spaces of identity

K Wilson et al.

ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING D-SOCIETY & SPACE (2005)