Skip To Content

TitleSocial impact assessment and the anthropology of the future in Canada's tar sands
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2013
AuthorsWestman, C. N.
Secondary TitleHuman Organization
Volume72
Number2
Pagination9 pages
Date Published05/2013
PublisherSociety for Applied Anthropology, University of Saskatchewan
Place PublishedSaskatoon, SK
Publication Languageeng
ISSN Number0018-7259, 1938-3525
KeywordsAnthropology of the Future, Canada, social impact assessment, tar sands, traditional land use
Abstract

In considering risk forecasting in light of anthropological and interdisciplinary impact assessment literature, this article demonstrates that impact assessment in Canada's tar sands sector is about designing the future, legitimizing future energy development, and rendering defense of foraging economies into technical, rather than political, channels. Impact assessment is a future-oriented, modeling-based practice, with a problematic relationship to empirical research methods such as ethnography. While purportedly foregrounding the knowledge of expert forecasters over that of impacted people, impact assessment documents and processes actually raise serious questions about forecasters' expertise and impartiality. Using three case studies of traditional land use reports from the tar sands region, this article draws on literature from the Anthropology of the Future to understand and critique the construction of expert knowledge and predictive power in the tar sands region through social impact assessment documents.

Locational Keywords

tar sands, Canada

Active Link

http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/855778564

Group

CEMA

Citation Key50594

Enter keywords or search terms and press Search

Search this site


Subscribe to the site

Syndicate content

Bookmark and Share