1. Wasted Life: Labour, Liveliness, and the Production of Value.
- Author
-
Stanley, Anna
- Subjects
- *
URANIUM mining , *URANIUM industry , *MINES & mineral resources & the environment , *PUBLIC health , *ENVIRONMENTAL risk assessment - Abstract
This paper asks how Dene (and alongside it non-human) life is connected to the production and circulation of value in the Canadian uranium economy. I examine the ways in which life links up with value during the lifetime of the mine and at the time of a major public inquiry into its health and ecological effects. Against the backdrop of the highly uneven and deeply racialized economy of nuclear production I make two intertwined arguments. First I argue that 'wastage' is a reconfiguration of nature integral to the production of capitalist value in which capital addresses itself directly to the vital processes of (some) living things. Second, at a time when the relational politics that shaped value were being actively subverted by claims publicly advanced by Deline First Nation Dene about cancer death and contamination, I argue that a risk calculation central to the Canada Deline Uranium Table's analysis worked to governmentally secure evidence of wastage and restore the configurations of in/visibility that shaped value production in this economy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF