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How Canada is targeting Indigenous resistance to TMX
Indigenous land defenders are receiving the harshest treatment for protesting the troubled Trans Mountain pipeline expansion. How far will the courts go to repress those opposed to a project that seems doomed to fail?
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Magazine
Manufacturing Wet’suwet’en consent
Why the Canadian government and industry are doing everything they can to avoid consulting with hereditary leadership on Wet’suwet’en yintah
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TD Scholars ask TD to cut ties with Coastal GasLink pipeline
In this open letter, 33 recipients of TD’s Scholarship for Community Leadership ask that TD withdraw its support for the pipeline, which violates Wet’suwet’en sovereignty
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The Canadian state seems like an immovable object. But Indigenous women are an unstoppable force.
It’s been barely two weeks since the federal government released the final report of the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls. And yet, amid an admission of genocide, the colonial project continues apace; its existence met with celebration for another year.
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Magazine
“We need to begin protecting all of our territories”
Two hours east of the Unist’ot’en camp, Wet’suwet’en land defenders from the Likhts’amisyu clan are starting a new camp in the path of the Coastal GasLink pipeline
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Magazine
Bodies on the Line
Enbridge’s Line 3 pipeline replacement slices through the southern half of Saskatchewan, but there’s little Indigenous opposition in the province. To mount our own fight, we’ll have to learn from other Indigenous resistance efforts along the pipeline’s route.
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Magazine
The Oil Industry’s PR Offensive
A climate justice journalist heads to the Global Petroleum Show in Calgary to see how the industry is pushing its messages, and who is doing doing the heavy lifting.
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Magazine
A pipeline to regret
If you weren’t convinced before – simply by being an air-breathing, water-drinking human being – it’s now undeniable that we all have skin in this pipeline game. Trudeau has made us all potential shareholders in a leaky, aging piece of climate-cooking infrastructure.
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Magazine
The New Threat Threshold
What Project SITKA reveals about the basis of pernicious surveillance of Indigenous activists
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Winterizing is Political
As winter descends, #NoDAPL water and land protectors are preparing for a long haul resistance against the violence of the military, police, and capital.
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Chasing the National Energy Board out of Montreal
An interview with activist Alyssa Symons-Belanger after her release from arrest.
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The Husky Oil Spill: Just One of 18,000
Understanding the pipeline spill that has sparked a water crisis in communities along the North Saskatchewan River.
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Magazine
Against the Pipeline Prerogative
The National Energy Board is the regulatory body that determines whether (and which) pipelines will pump bitumen across Canada. As an extension of a colonial project that violates Indigenous land and consent, the NEB is up against Indigenous women and their allies leading the fight against pipelines.
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Line 9 and Line 7 Sabotage
For the fourth time in two months, protesters have disturbed major pipelines.
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Land-based Resistance at the Unist’ot’en Camp
The Unist’ot’en continue to square off with pipeline companies and the RCMP.
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Magazine
The Class Politics of Pipeline Resistance
As anti-pipeline campaigns rise to the forefront of activist activity, do environmentalists need to re-evaluate their engagement with affected communities such as Toronto’s Jane-Finch neighbourhood?
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Chevron’s Pacific Trail Pipeline is the one to stop this summer
Stopping Chevron’s Pacific Trail Pipeline this summer could be a decisive event in the history of pipeline resistance.