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Farming the North: Cycles of Extraction & Dispossession

Environmental Policy
Governance
Political Economy
Public Policy
Race
Climate Change
Power
Capitalism
Sarah Rotz
York University
Sarah Rotz
York University

Abstract

This paper examines recent initiatives to expand commercial agriculture in Northern Canada, situating these within the historical context of settler colonial agriculture. We ask: how do contemporary efforts in agricultural expansion differ from, or replicate, earlier forms of land acquisition? Focusing on land assembly, we explore how land consolidation, privatization, and conversion meet agricultural and economic objectives under contemporary colonial capitalism. We consider whether agricultural expansion reinforces narratives that valorize settler agriculture and/or perpetuates patterns of dispossession. Through privatization and competitive marketization of ‘underutilized’ lands, agricultural expansion may reconfigure land ownership in ways that serve capital interests and, primarily, settler agricultural entities. This case highlights the role of agricultural development and the interdependence of corporate and state actors in extending financialized land economies, potentially undermining Indigenous food sovereignty, jurisdiction, and autonomy.