In terms of environmental injustice, our ancestors would have likely believed that today’s times are ones in which environmental destruction has occurred at the same time that relationships of consent have been diminished. Today, through actions such as the resistance to the Dakota Access Pipeline and the Unist’ot’en Camp, Indigenous peoples largely do not have the right to consent to the actions of other groups that affect environments in which Indigenous peoples live, work, and play. There is a lack of concern, broadly, with whether our nonhuman relatives consent to how they are treated by industries such as oil and gas, commercial agriculture, and mining. The landscape-scale environmental change caused by these industries demonstrates little concern for the well-being of nonhuman lives and ecosystems. Our ancestors would have also noticed a marked lack of respect for those entities for whom we cannot consent, such as the climate system. It seems like some people will not be sufficiently concerned about climate change until it is too late.
As a solution, when Indigenous peoples invoke their own cosmologies and philosophies, they seek to bring attention both to the maintenance of colonial domination and to Indigenous traditions of environmental stewardship that offer underrepresented visions for environmentally just futures. Indigenous cosmologies and philosophies call for concrete reforms, such as land reclamation, at the same time that they suggest shifts in consciousness of human relationships to the nonhuman world. When Indigenous peoples advocate for their own philosophies and cosmologies, they should not be mistaken for expressions of spirituality reminiscent of the conceptions of faith, spirituality, or transcendence that are common in some types of Christianity. Rather, Indigenous philosophies and cosmologies often refer to moral relationships, especially moral qualities such as consent, that are connected systematically with human relationships to the environment.
Environmental justice, then, is about consent, but not just any type of consent. It is about understanding the ways in which consent and dissent are part of our daily lives, engagement with politics and economics, and our connections to the land and nonhuman worlds around us. Indigenous environmental justice pushes us to be aware of the different dimensions of consent around us. But, again, consent is just one moral quality, and further study and practice of Indigenous environmental traditions speaks to many other moral relationships, such as responsibility and accountability, and moral qualities, such as trust and reciprocity.
Deepening Our Understanding
1 On a daily basis, people are affected by the food they eat, the air and water they are exposed to, and materials and chemicals they interact with in buildings and the land.On a piece of paper, place yourself in the center. Using lines, draw out how many different types of exposures as you can think of that you are exposed to every day from food, air, water, buildings, and the land. These exposures may be risky or not.For each exposure, guess what industry or government entity controls it.For each one, describe whether you feel that you have consented or would have a chance to dissent to it.
2 Think about other systems of oppression that result in environmental injustice (imperialism, settler colonialism, patriarchy, capitalism, democracy, and the like). For a particular system, list the ways in which your participation, or consent, is integral to this environmental injustice.
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