2015
Whyte, K.
Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Focusing on Indigenous food systems, the author discusses a conception of environmental justice as interference in Indigenous Peoples' collective capacities to self-determine how they adapt to broader forces that impact their food systems, such as climate change and economic transitions. The author makes connections between environmental justice, the movements of global settler-industrial states, and the food and environmental justice issues of other populations.
Indigenous Food Systems, Environmental Justice, and Settler-Industrial States.
Whyte, K. (2015). Indigenous food systems, environmental justice, and settler-industrial states. In M. Rawlinson & C. Ward (eds.), Global food, global justice: Essays on eating under globalization (pp. 143-56). Cambridge Scholars Publishing.
January 2025
COVID-19 Environmental Justice
Mental Health Culture and Language First Nations Health Environmental Health Climate Change
Self-determination and Self-governance Environmental Health Water Safety and Security
First Nations Health Environmental Health Water Safety and Security