Breathing Fire into Landscapes that Burn: Wildfire Management in a Time of Alterlife

  • Alex Zahara Memorial University of Newfoundland
Keywords: wildfire, canada, alterlife, forest management, settler colonialism

Abstract

Across the globe, settler nation-states are being forced to contend with the large-scale ecological and social disruptions caused by settler colonialism. Wildfires are a charismatic example of this: when anthropogenic climate change combines with colonial forest management practices, wildfires act in ever changing ways with often violent and uneven impacts to human and nonhuman life. In a context of environmental change, managers, fire ecologists, and politicians alike are increasingly looking to reintroduce fire as a way of restoring “natural” forest landscapes while reducing fire suppression costs. In this paper, I examine one such policy of fire re-integration, in what is currently the Canadian province of Saskatchewan, the homelands of more than 50,000 Indigenous people (Cree, Dakota, Dene, Métis) who live in the province’s Boreal Forest region. In 2004, the Province implemented a controversial policy that locals colloquially refer to as “Let-it-Burn,” where fires are allowed to burn until they encroach upon something designated of “value” (typically human life, community structures, public infrastructure, and commercial timber). While wildfire managers, scientists, and politicians alike consistently advocate for policies of fire-reintegration as ecologically-sound and financially responsible ways forward with fire management, many locals have argued that “Let-it-Burn” is a direct affront to Indigenous sovereignty, destroying contemporary forest landscapes and rebuilding them through state-sanctioned settler values. Breathing fire back into landscapes that burn is a peculiar solution that at once acknowledges and erases the effects of fire’s removal through policies of restoration that risk ignoring the ongoingness of life in forested areas. Through interviews and archival and ethnographic fieldwork, this paper traces the history of the province’s “Let-it-Burn” policy, asking the question, “how to burn well in compromised lands?”  As a way forward with fire reintegration (or not), I highlight the necessity of Indigenous partnership, leadership, and direction within fire management practices on Indigenous territory, which may include fire suppression. This paper adds to STS scholarship on ecological ruination and alterlife, arguing that wildfire management practices are likely to cause harm so long as the effects of settler colonialism are placed in the past and Indigenous rebuilding is erased.

Author Biography

Alex Zahara, Memorial University of Newfoundland

Alex Zahara (he/him) is a settler scholar from kistahpinanihk/Prince Albert, and a PhD Candidate in the Department of Geography at Memorial University of Newfoundland. His dissertation research ‘Settler Fire Management’ examines the history and culture of wildfire management in northern Saskatchewan with a focus on settler colonialism in alignment with Indigenous, feminist, and queer thinkers. Alex is trained in biology, STS, and settler colonial theory and his research focuses on living well in polluted or otherwise compromised landscapes. He is a co-editor of Discard Studies, a member of Civic Laboratory for Environmental Action Research (CLEAR), and the ‘Northern Exposures’ research team.

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Published
10 Nov 2020
Section
Thematic Collections