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Permeable Jurisdictions: Navigating Toxic Exposure in the Navajo Nation on Sept. 8th, 2022

Dr. Theresa Montoya CNAIS

Thursday, September 8th, 2022听
5:00-6:15辫尘听
185 Benson Earth Sciences听
精品SM在线影片听

Dr. Teresa Montoya, Asst. Professor of Anthropology at the University of Chicago, will be giving the University of听Colorado Boulder鈥檚 Environmental Justice Graduate Certificate Annual Lecture on Thursday, September 8, from 5:00-6:15pm in 185 Benson Earth Sciences building. Her talk, "Permeable听Jurisdictions:

Navigating听Toxic Exposure in the Navajo Nation," is open to the campus听community. We look forward to seeing you there!

Talk description: In听the 20th听century, the Navajo Nation was the site of the largest听production of domestic uranium ore to fuel the burgeoning military-industrial听complex in听the United States. As a consequence of this violent development,听there remain over 500 abandoned uranium mines within the Navajo Nation. Though听the听Navajo Nation has since issued a moratorium on uranium mining on its听sovereign lands, the legacy of these extractive practices remains in the form听of听toxic contamination of its land and water. The ability of the Navajo Nation听to protect its citizens from continued exposure, however, is limited by its听lack of听jurisdiction across discontinuous non-Native land parcels that exist听within the geographic boundaries of the reservation. Large areas of the Navajo听Nation听are so-called 鈥渃heckerboard鈥 lands, owing to disastrous听19th-century federal land allotment programs. This talk interrogates听historic settler colonial land听policy through the analytic of 鈥減ermeability鈥 to听theorize the ongoing challenges鈥攁nd possibilities鈥攆or environmental听regulation and political mobilization听on Indigenous lands today.

Those unable to join us in person can observe through Zoom:听听Passcode 664463

This talk is co-sponsored by the following units: Center for Native American and Indigenous Studies, Environmental Center, Department of Anthropology, Department of Environmental Studies, Department of Ethnic Studies, Department of Geography, Department of History, and Department of Sociology. Many sincere thanks to these units at CU for helping to make this visit happen.