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NEW WEBSITE

We have a new website that will now be the main home for the UBC POLAR C LUB.

http://www.thepolarclub.ca/

 

We will keep this blog site as an archive of past events.

 

We also have a new partner – The UBC GREEN COLLEGE – and we are helping them to run an Arctic-Wise seminar series.  We need your help to organize events and/or simply attend them.

Please go to the new website for more details.

HED signing out.

Best regards,

Helen Drost

 

 

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UK science is to get one of the biggest polar research vessels in the world

The £200m investment in an icebreaker was announced by Chancellor George Osborne in a speech in Cambridge.

The ship is likely to be 130m long and sport a helipad, cranes, onboard labs, and have the ability to deploy subs and other ocean survey and sampling gear.

It should be ready to enter service in 2019, and will support scientists in both the Antarctic and the Arctic.

The strength of its hull will allow it to push deeper into pack ice than any previous British research vessel.

 

read more …. http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-27129690

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Arctic News LINKS

International Code of Safety for Shipping in Polar Waters

As Arctic ice decreases International shipping increases

IMO is developing a draft mandatory International Code of safety for ships operating in polar waters (Polar Code), to cover the full range of design, construction, equipment, operational, training, search and rescue and environmental protection matters relevant to ships operating in the inhospitable waters surrounding the two poles. The work is being coordinated by the Subcommittee on Ship Design and Construction (SDC)  – formerly the Subcommittee on Ship Design and Equipment (DE). MarineLink

For more information on daily progress of subcommittee  – check out the daily blog from Victoria BC based company. Click on logo:

Home

 

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People of a Feather at UBC – ONE night only !

 IS HOSTING :

On SEPTEMBER 24th – 6:30 PM 2013

at the Norm Theatre

   JOEL HEATH IS BACK HOME FROM

  AWARD WINNING FILM TOUR:

  PEOPLE OF A FEATHER

 

AND WILL BE WITH US TO SHOW HIS FILM   –   ONE NIGHT ONLY !

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

with support from:

 

 

 

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Arctic Reading Group 3rd reading: DATE & LOCATION TBA

Plan to meet later in the summer…

Click  this link for contact details to be added to mailing list:

Caroline Desbiens’s new book

“Power from the North Territory, Identity, and the Culture of Hydroelectricity in Quebec,”

published by UBC Press:

http://www.ubcpress.ca/search/title_book.asp?BookID=299173852 

About the Book :

In the 1970s, Hydro-Québec declared “We Are Hydro-Québécois.” The publicity campaign slogan symbolized the extent to which hydroelectric development in the North had come to both reflect and fuel French Canada’s aspirations in the South. The slogan helped southerners relate to the province’s northern territory and to accept the exploitation of its resources.

In Power from the North, Caroline Desbiens explores how this culture of hydroelectricity helped shape the material landscape during the first phase of the James Bay hydroelectric project. She analyzes the cultural forces that contributed to the transformation of the La Grande River into a hydroelectric complex. Policy makers and Quebecers did not, she argues, view those who built the dams as mere workers — they saw them as pioneers in a previously uninhabited landscape now inscribed with the codes of culture and spectacle.

This dynamic book reveals that drawing power from the North involves not only the cultural erasure of Aboriginal homelands but also rewriting the region’s history in the language of identity and territoriality. To reverse this trend, Desbiens calls for a truly sustainable resource management, one in which all actors bring an awareness of their own cultural histories and visions of nature, North, and nation to the negotiating table.

 


About the Author(s)

Caroline Desbiens is a professor of geography at Laval University. She holds the Canada Research Chair in Historical Geography of the North.

 


Table of Contents

Foreword: Ideas of North / by Graeme Wynn

Introduction: Looking North

Part 1: Power and the North
1 The Nexus of Hydroelectricity in Quebec
2 Discovering a New World: James Bay as Eeyou Istchee

Part 2: Writing the Land
3 Who Shall Convert the Wilderness into a Flourishing Country?
4 From the Roman de la Terre to the Roman des Ressources

Part 3: Rewriting the Land
5 Pioneers
6 Workers
7 Spectators

Conclusion: Ongoing Stories and Powers from the North

 


Reviews

“As society struggles to find a balance between economic security and environmental well-being and grapples with the various challenges posed by social and environmental injustices, the freighted implications of popular ideas of the North need to be better understood. Power from the North can and should help with this.”
— from the Foreword by Graeme Wynn

Power from the North is a much-needed reinterpretation of Quebec’s relationship with its north. Desbiens’s sophisticated critique of nationalist, heroic narratives inherent in the earlier James Bay projects argues persuasively that development has been both an aspect of the modern technocratic state and of a troubling legacy of colonialism in Quebec. This timely historical geography speaks directly to this legacy, as well as to current political rhetoric about the North.”
— Hans M. Carlson, author of Home Is the Hunter: The James Bay Cree and Their Land

 


Sample Chapter

Sample Chapter [PDF]

 


Related Topics

History > Other
Environmental Studies
Geography

 


Other Ways To Order

In Canada, order your copy of Power from the North from UTP Distribution at:

UTP Distribution
5201 Dufferin Street
Toronto, Ontario
M3H 5T8

Phone orders: 1(800)565-9523 or (416)667-7791
Fax orders: 1(800)221-9985 or (416)667-7832
Email: utpbooks@utpress.utoronto.ca

 

Ordering information for customers outside Canada

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