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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Visual Storytelling, Intergenerational Environmental Justice and Indigenous Sovereignty: Exploring Images and Stories amid a Contested Oil Pipeline Project

TLDR
The importance of an intergenerational lens of connectedness to nature and sustainability is explored, discussing visual storytelling not just as visual counter-narrative (to neocolonial extractivism) but also as an invitation into fundamentally different ways of seeing and interacting.
Abstract
Visual practices of representing fossil fuel projects are entangled in diverse values and relations that often go underexplored. In Canada, visual media campaigns to aggressively push forward the fossil fuel industry not only relegate to obscurity indigenous values but mask evidence on health impacts as well as the aspirations of those most affected, including indigenous communities whose food sovereignty and stewardship relationship to the land continues to be affronted by oil pipeline expansion. The Tsleil-Waututh Nation, based at the terminal of the Trans Mountain Pipeline in Canada, has been at the forefront of struggles against the pipeline expansion. Contributing to geographical, environmental studies, and public health research grappling with the performativity of images, this article explores stories conveying health, environmental, and intergenerational justice concerns on indigenous territory. Adapting photovoice techniques, elders and youth illustrated how the environment has changed over time; impacts on sovereignty-both food sovereignty and more broadly; concepts of health, well-being and deep cultural connection with water; and visions for future relationships. We explore the importance of an intergenerational lens of connectedness to nature and sustainability, discussing visual storytelling not just as visual counter-narrative (to neocolonial extractivism) but also as an invitation into fundamentally different ways of seeing and interacting.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Regarding the Pain of Others

Maxine Harris
- 01 Mar 2004 - 
TL;DR: The continuous casting process comprises continuously pouring a molten metal into a space surrounded with the hollow mold and the core of the above equipment, thereby solidifying the molten metal to form an ingot having a hollow.
Book ChapterDOI

The United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples

TL;DR: In this article, the authors suggest that recent global developments have created considerable impetus for change in Indian Country, and they believe that Indigenous populations may well be on the cusp of a new day in Indian policy in America, if proper consideration is given to this global imperative.
Journal ArticleDOI

Decoloniality and anti-oppressive practices for a more ethical ecology.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors outline five shifts that could help to transform academic ecological practice: decolonize your mind; know your histories; decolonialize access; decolonizing expertise; and practise ethical ecology in inclusive teams.
Journal ArticleDOI

Indigenous Environmental Justice within Marine Ecosystems: A Systematic Review of the Literature on Indigenous Peoples’ Involvement in Marine Governance and Management

TL;DR: This article developed and applied a systematic review methodology to identify and understand how the peer-reviewed literature characterises Indigenous peoples' involvement in marine governance and management approaches in terms of equity and justice worldwide.
Journal ArticleDOI

Oil pipelines and food sovereignty: threat to health equity for Indigenous communities

TL;DR: Effects of Canada's proposed Trans Mountain oil pipeline expansion on the health and food sovereignty of the Tsleil-Waututh Nation (TWN) are considered through contamination and impeded access to uncontaminated traditional foods.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Photovoice: Concept, Methodology, and Use for Participatory Needs Assessment:

TL;DR: Applying photovoice to public health promotion, the authors describe the methodology and analyze its value for participatory needs assessment.
Book

Regarding the Pain of Others

Susan Sontag
TL;DR: Regarding the Pain of Others as mentioned in this paper is a searing analysis of our numbed response to images of horror, from Goya's Disasters of War to news footage and photographs of the conflicts in Vietnam, Rwanda and Bosnia, pictures have been charged with inspiring dissent, fostering violence or instilling apathy in us, the viewer.
Journal ArticleDOI

Place attachment: How far have we come in the last 40 years?

TL;DR: A review of several hundred empirical and theoretical papers and chapters reveals that despite mobility and globalization processes, place continues to be an object of strong attachments as discussed by the authors, and the main message of the three components of the tripartite model of place attachment (Scannell & Gifford, 2010a ), the Person component has attracted disproportionately more attention than the Place and Process components.
Journal ArticleDOI

Defining place attachment: A tripartite organizing framework

TL;DR: Place attachment has been researched quite broadly, and so has been defined in a variety of ways as discussed by the authors, and various definitions of the concept are reviewed and synthesized into a three-dimensional, person-process-place organizing framework.
Journal ArticleDOI

Photovoice: A Review of the Literature in Health and Public Health:

TL;DR: No relationship between group size and quality of participation but a direct relationship between the latter and project duration as well as with getting to action is revealed, and photovoice appears to contribute to an enhanced understanding of community assets and needs and to empowerment.
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