Bodies Exposed: Reframing the Geopolitics of Dilution in Canada’s Chemical Valley

TitleBodies Exposed: Reframing the Geopolitics of Dilution in Canada’s Chemical Valley
Publication TypeMiscellaneous
Authors
Abstractlong the St. Clair River at the southern tip of Lake Huron, in the heart of the Great Lakes, Canada’s ‘Chemical Valley’ – a toxic petrochemical complex – occupies Aamjiwnaang Indigenous territory. Approximately 2,000 Anishinabek people call this their home, which is now reduced to a small reserve due to land dealings enabled by public officials at multiple levels of government over the years. Stretching over 30 km, their territory houses the largest concentration of petroleum and chemical industry sites in Canada.
URLhttps://toxicnews.org/2019/02/21/bodies-exposed-reframing-the-geopolitics-of-dilution-in-canadas-chemical-valley/