Subject: | | Climate policy and the oil & gas industry in Canada |
From: | | "J.P. Sapinski" <[log in to unmask]> |
Reply-To: | | [log in to unmask][log in to unmask], 11 Sep 2017 10:13:22 +0000677_iso-8859-1 Dear colleagues,
With apologies for cross-posting and shameless self promotion. I wanted to make you aware that 'Cricket, migration and diasporic communities' is now available in paperback and is thus, much more affordable to libraries, students etc. I attach a flyer. Here is the blurb from the back.
It is often argued that migrant and diasporic communities have developed a particular fondness for the game of cricket precisely because it allowed them to engage in anti-colonial struggle(s) against England. In so doing their experiences of playing, supporting and watching the sport help to shed light on the problematic relationships between [...][log in to unmask] |
Date: | | Mon, 18 Sep 2017 22:42:40 -0700 |
Content-Type: | | text/plain |
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Of interest to Canadians on this list (apologies for cross-postings):
http://www.corporatemapping.ca/bcs-last-climate-leadership-plan-was-written-in-big-oils-boardroom-literally/
In short, it appears that the British Columbia Climate Leadership Plan
released in the summer of 2016 was written in close collaboration with
the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers - the main oil and gas
lobby group in the country.
I'd be curious to hear of other examples of such cases of regulatory
capture or institutional corruption in environmental policy-making
elsewhere. I can think of the close involvement of the OECD in writing
the Brundtland report (Jim MacNeil, president of the WCED, was from the
OECD, and the report expanded on the ideas floated at a 1984 conference
organized by the OECD), but there's probably a few other documented
instances.
Best,
jp
--
J.P. Sapinski
Post-doctoral fellow
Department of Sociology
University of Victoria, BC
Email: [log in to unmask]
uvic.academia.edu/JPSapinski
www.researchgate.net/profile/Jean_Philippe_Sapinski
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