ADAM GAUDRY
The Martlet (University of Victoria)
Economic development is seen as the future of indigenous communities by many, both indigenous and otherwise. But when we unpack this term and examine how government and industry use it, we can recognize it as another colonial-style “development” program that ultimately undermines the long-term sustainability of local indigenous economies.
I am not talking about all types of economic development, or the type of small-scale community economic development that most indigenous communities want, but a very specific kind of capitalism based on large-scale resource extraction. This usually involves some sort of community-corporate partnership that is supposed to create jobs through industry employment, as well as provide some trickle-down for local contractors to supply industry. The idea is that the presence of big business will also create demand for small business.
This logic is based on a misunderstanding of the issues facing indigenous communities. The government reasons that indigenous communities are in need of economic development, and big business needs the resources on indigenous lands. So a mutually beneficial partnership can be created — one side has resources, the other cash and jobs. Supposedly everybody wins.
Yet, the central concern for many indigenous peoples remains: how can we protect our ways of life from colonialism, government interference and environmental degradation? If these are indeed the goals for our communities, the solutions being offered to us — large-scale projects like dams, mines and pipelines — do not get at the heart of the matter. Rather, they propose the most destructive, shortsighted and risky projects imaginable. These projects will undermine the long-term viability of land-based cultural practices, the very thing communities are trying to protect and revive.
Furthermore, capitalist economic development does not address the colonial power imbalance that has created poverty, educational disparities and struggles for cultural survival in Indigenous communities. In fact, capitalist development was the primary motivation for the theft of our lands and the criminalization of indigenous governance in the first place.
While we can argue the merits of capitalist economic development in indigenous communities, the idea that this is the basis for greater unity doesn’t really hold up to any scrutiny. In fact, most indigenous-Canadian government conflict is over capitalist economic development anyway. The Oka crisis was about a golf course on a burial ground, Grassy Narrows was about a pulp mill polluting water, Caledonia was about a housing development on reserve lands, and the Atlantic lobster fishery felt threatened by Burnt Church setting a few lobster traps. Now, 61 First Nations have voiced collective opposition to the Enbridge Northern Gateway Pipeline in B.C., which has led to tension with the federal government.
Can capitalism be the driving force for better indigenous-Canadian relations? No. This relationship tends to be “good” when indigenous peoples are saying “yes” to government-backed corporate projects, but strained when indigenous people want to follow their own path and reject large-scale developments. This kind of relationship is neither healthy nor functional — it is based on indigenous communities toeing the line.
Real understanding is not facilitated by economics; it is a social and political process. We need to have better interpersonal relations and express respect for one another in everyday ways. The original view of indigenous-Canadian relations was not a unified state, but a treaty relationship between separate polities that respected the independence of one another. This is what a “fixed” relationship should look like — two political communities engaging in respectful dialogue.
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Photo: @boetter/Flickr