TY - BOOK AU - Butler,Paula TI - Colonial Extractions: Race and Canadian Mining in Contemporary Africa SN - 9781442649323 U1 - 338.2096 23 PY - 2015///] CY - Toronto : PB - University of Toronto Press, KW - Mineral industries KW - Economic aspects KW - Africa KW - Social aspects KW - Mining corporations KW - Canada KW - BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / General KW - bisacsh N1 - Frontmatter --; Contents --; Acknowledgments --; Acronyms --; 1. Contemporary Canadian Mining: Colonial Continuities --; 2. Theorizing Canada’s Twenty-First-Century Colonialist Mining Project --; 3. “I Hear the Rustling of Gold under My Feet”: Mining, Race, and the Making of Canada --; 4. “Something from Nothing”: Generating Wealth in the Racialized Mining Economy --; 5. Racial Rule: Resource Appropriation and the Rule of Law --; 6. Who Do We Say We Are? Narratives of Canadian Mining Professionals in African States --; 7. “I Wouldn’t Glorify Them as Prospectors”: Colonial Contact Zones and the Eradication of African “Artisanal” Miners --; 8. Refusing the “White Man’s Burden”:1 Investing in Colour-Blind Mining in Post-Apartheid South Africa --; 9. Conclusion: Imagining Decolonized Relations --; Notes --; Bibliography --; Index; restricted access N2 - Challenging Canada’s image as a humane, enlightened global actor, Colonial Extractions examines the troubling racial logic that underpins Canadian mining operations in several African countries. Drawing on colonial, postcolonial, and critical race theory, Paula Butler investigates Canadian mining activities and the discourses which serve to legitimate this work.Through a series of interviews with senior personnel of businesses with mining operations in Africa, Butler identifies a continuation of the same colonialist mindset that saw resource ownership and racial dominance over Indigenous peoples in Canada as part of Canada’s nation-building project. Financially, culturally, and psychologically, Canadians are invested in extracting resource-based wealth in the Global South, and – as Butler’s analysis of Canada’s influence over South Africa’s first post-apartheid mining legislation shows – they look to legitimize that extraction through neoliberal legal frameworks and a powerful national myth of benevolence.Complementing analyses of the industry through political economy or critical development studies, Colonial Extractions is a powerful and unsettling critique of the cultural dimension of Canada’s mining industry overseas UR - https://doi.org/10.3138/9781442619951 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/isbn/9781442619951 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/document/cover/isbn/9781442619951/original ER -