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    Inuit Nunangat: Where Two Worlds Collide (From the Art and Waste in Pannituuq [Pangnirtung] Project)

    Inuit Nunangat is a site where differing epistemologies and cosmologies collide. The Arctic waste crisis stems from a culture of wasting that is capitalist and not Inuit. With the delicate Arctic ecosystem degrading due to climate change, escalating resource extraction, the opening of the Northwest Passage, and the expansion of NORAD, unprecedented volumes of waste and contaminants are causing unknowable changes in life, land, sea, and ice. At the intersection of art, politics and activism, the Art and Wastes in Pangnirtung Project challenges assumptions about Inuit and exposes the pervasive nature of settler colonization as the root cause of wastes.
    Submission Year: 
    2023
    Photographer's affiliation: 
    Graduate student
    Academic areas: 
    Arts and Science
    Graduate Studies and Postdoctoral Affairs
    Art of Research categories: 
    Partnerships for inclusivity
    Photo: 
    [Photo of the water and industrial equipment on the bank of Inuit Nunangat]
    Categories: 
    PhD student/candidate
    Faculty of Arts and Science
    School of Environmental Studies
    School of Graduate Studies
    Mobilizing Creativity and Enabling Cultures
    Creative Production and Expression
    Resurgent Indigenous Research in Local and Global Contexts
    Society, Culture and Human Behaviour
    Fundamental Principles of Nature: from Discovery to Application and Innovation
    Ecology, Biodiversity and the Natural Environment
    Sustainability, Environment and Resources
    Protecting the Natural Environment
    Location of photograph: 
    Pannituuq (Pangnirtung), Nunavut
    Photographer's name: 
    micky renders
    Display Photographers Affiltion + Faculty or Department: 
    PhD Student, School of Environmental Studies