Please circulate through your networks.

Thanks,


Karen


--------------------

Call for Papers
Decolonizing Water: Indigenous water politics, resource extraction, and settler 
colonialism
American Association of Geographers meeting
April 5-9 2017, Boston, MA
*Organizers: Karen Bakker (University of British Columbia), Glen Coulthard 
(University of British Columbia)
As emblematized by the ongoing protests at Standing Rock, water is a 
foundational element—biophysical, epistemological, and spiritual—in Indigenous 
societies and lifeways. This crucial life source has come under increased 
threat due to the claimed necessity of extractivist development projects, as 
demonstrated in the marked increase in proposed pipeline construction, 
liquefied natural gas development, hydraulic fracturing, and bitumen crude oil 
production across Turtle Island. These extractivist projects threaten the land 
and waterways that sustain not only our own individual and collective lives, 
but also the lives of all of our relations: human and more-than-human. In the 
United States and Canada, the intensification of hydraulic fracturing has 
rapidly accelerated processes of accumulation by dispossession, in a context of 
“light touch” regulation in which new and significant breaches of Indigenous 
rights have emerged, and in a context in which threats to water are scantily 
monitored, under-regulated, and under-reported.
This panel brings together theorists of water politics, neoliberalization, and 
decolonization. We encourage a focus on the contemporary politics of resistance 
and resurgence by Indigenous peoples. We seek a diversity of perspectives that 
offer critical engagement with the ideas and practices of decolonization. 
Equally, we also welcome interventions that challenge decolonization as a 
framework for analyzing and interpreting water politics. We particularly 
welcome contributions focused on the water-energy nexus, oil and gas 
(especially hydraulic fracturing), and pipelines.
We invite discussants to speak to a broad range of issues, including (but not 
limited to):
•          Water and violence, including militarization, policing, 
securitization, and settler colonial violence
•          Water and resistance/refusal/ protection of sacred sites
•          Water and (settler) colonialism
•          Hydropower, displacement, and dispossession
•          Water and Indigenous laws
•          Water, treaty-making and Indigenous rights
•          Neoliberalization of water in the context of resource development
•          Links between water grabbing and land grabbing
•          Water and art/cultural politics/production
•          Water and social justice/environmental justice
•          Water and Indigenous governance
•          Water, health, and livelihoods

We plan to organize a paper session followed by a panel at which participants 
can act as panelists or discussants.

•      We invite those interested in presenting papers to send their title, 
250-word abstract, and affiliation.

•      We invite those interested in the panel to summarize their relevant 
interests in 100 to 200 words.
Please submit your proposal by October 20th to Karen Bakker 
(karen.bak...@ubc.ca<mailto:karen.bak...@ubc.ca>) and Glen Coulthard 
(g...@interchange.ubc.ca<mailto:g...@interchange.ubc.ca>). We will notify 
accepted participants by October 24th, 2016.

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