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El. knyga: Under Pressure: Diamond Mining and Everyday Life in Northern Canada

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Told from the vantage point of the "Hub of the North," this student-friendly ethnography examines the boom and bust of Canada’s diamond industry.



In 2007, Canada became the third largest producer of diamonds in the world. Primarily mined on the edge of the Arctic, these diamonds are said to bring economic development and opportunity to nearby Indigenous communities. In Under Pressure, anthropologist Lindsay A. Bell examines the effects of diamond mining on an increasingly diverse northern population.

Through an ethnographic focus on everyday life in Hay River, a multi-ethnic town in the Northwest Territories, this book illustrates the different ways Indigenous, settler, and immigrant northerners navigate the opportunities and obstacles created by large-scale resource development. By situating contemporary diamond mines within the long history of extraction in the region, Bell describes the social, cultural, and economic pressures that shape the people in this Northern community. In contrast to many polarizing accounts that deem mining as either good or bad, Under Pressure uses diamonds as an anthropological prism to consider larger issues related to Arctic extraction, globalization, Indigenous rights, and ethical consumption.

List of Illustrations
vii
List of Maps
ix
Acknowledgements xi
1 Diamonds with a Story
1(23)
2 Nation
24(15)
3 Race
39(24)
4 Infrastructure
63(17)
5 Mobility
80(17)
6 Morality
97(22)
7 Aspiration
119(15)
8 Conclusion
134(11)
References 145(20)
Index 165
Lindsay A. Bell is an assistant professor of anthropology at Western University.