Abstract

A veritable gold rush of oil and gas exploration and export development is washing along the coast of western Canada. This paper explores the contemporary setting and possibilities for collaborative research with Indigenous communities in the face of large-scale corporate interventions and the history of colonization. Drawing upon two decades of research and close collaboration with Indigenous communities on the North Coast of British Columbia, Menzies (himself an Indigenous scholar) argues that collaborative anthropology is both more necessary and more difficult than at almost any previous point in our history.

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