Chad Walker, Ph.D.

Research - Teaching - Impact

Sustainable Development and Environmental Injustice in Rural Ontario, Canada: Cases of Wind Energy and Biosolid Processing


Journal article


Chad Walker, Sarah Mason, Danny Bednar
Journal of Rural and Community Development, vol. 13(2), 2018 Apr 28

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APA   Click to copy
Walker, C., Mason, S., & Bednar, D. (2018). Sustainable Development and Environmental Injustice in Rural Ontario, Canada: Cases of Wind Energy and Biosolid Processing. Journal of Rural and Community Development, 13(2).


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Walker, Chad, Sarah Mason, and Danny Bednar. “Sustainable Development and Environmental Injustice in Rural Ontario, Canada: Cases of Wind Energy and Biosolid Processing.” Journal of Rural and Community Development 13, no. 2 (April 28, 2018).


MLA   Click to copy
Walker, Chad, et al. “Sustainable Development and Environmental Injustice in Rural Ontario, Canada: Cases of Wind Energy and Biosolid Processing.” Journal of Rural and Community Development, vol. 13, no. 2, Apr. 2018.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{chad2018a,
  title = {Sustainable Development and Environmental Injustice in Rural Ontario, Canada: Cases of Wind Energy and Biosolid Processing},
  year = {2018},
  month = apr,
  day = {28},
  issue = {2},
  journal = {Journal of Rural and Community Development},
  volume = {13},
  author = {Walker, Chad and Mason, Sarah and Bednar, Danny},
  month_numeric = {4}
}

 Global demographics are shifting, and as a result, rural populations are becoming further open to marginalization in regional politics. This research uses in-depth qualitative interviews to examine how the politics of two specific techno-industrial developments in Canada have played out within a complex urban-rural perspective of development. Using an environmental justice framework, we focus on how urban and rural values ​​are manifested in rural citizens' perspectives of development processes — an idea that has rarely been investigated in the Canadian context. Through a unique multiple case-study approach, complexities emerge within the general view of marginalization of rural places. Most notable is the notion that regional policy directions are driven largely by urban centers of power disconnected from the realities of rural life. Further, we note residents' identification of the multi-scalar nature of the problem, which appears to be less one of perceived industrial exploitation, and more a lack of representation in regional political processes 

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