Sustainable Development as Environmental Harm

£46.99

Sustainable Development as Environmental Harm

Rights, Regulation, and Injustice in the Canadian Oil Sands

Development studies Ethnic studies Sociology Anthropology Corporate crime / white-collar crime Politics and government Energy industries and utilities Legal aspects of criminology Criminal law: procedure and offences Environment law Biodiversity Environmental policy and protocols Pollution and threats to the environment Social impact of environmental issues

Author: James Heydon

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Collection: Crimes of the Powerful

Language: English

Published by: Routledge

Published on: 1st April 2019

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 1 Mb

ISBN: 9780429752285


In-depth Analysis of First Nations Opposition to the Oil Sands Industry

James Heydon offers detailed empirical insight into Canadian oil sands regulation in this comprehensive analysis. The environmental consequences of the oil sands industry have been thoroughly explored by scholars from a variety of disciplines. However, less well understood is how and why the provincial energy regulator has repeatedly sanctioned such a harmful pattern of production for almost two decades. This research monograph addresses that shortcoming.

Sustainable Development as Environmental Harm

Drawing from interviews with government, industry, and First Nation personnel, along with an analysis of almost 20 years of policy, strategy, and regulatory approval documents, Sustainable Development as Environmental Harm offers detailed empirical insight into Canadian oil sands regulation. Providing a thorough account of the ways in which the regulatory process has prioritised economic interests over the land-based cultural interests of First Nations, it addresses a gap in the literature by explaining how environmental harm has been systematically produced over time by a regulatory process tasked with the pursuit of ‘sustainable development’.

Understanding Regulatory Circumvention and Environmental Harm

With an approach emphasizing the importance of understanding how and why the regulatory process has been able to circumvent various protections for the entire duration in which the contemporary oil sands industry has existed, this work complements existing literature and provides a platform from which future investigations into environmental harm may be conducted. It is essential reading for those with an interest in green criminology, environmental harm, indigenous rights, and regulatory controls relating to fossil fuel production.

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