Extreme Extraction and Community Consequences:

Southern WV (Mountaintop Removal)

andNorthern AB (Tar Sands)

May Term 2015

Application Deadline: October 15, 2014

Dates: May 12 – June 2, 2015

Course: SoAn-399. 3 credits. Fulfills the IE gen ed requirement.

This course explores the phenomenon of “extreme extraction”– i.e., increasingly large-scale and environmentally devastating means of exposing and mining fossil fuels – through several lenses, with an emphasis on the consequences for communities located in close proximity to these operations. Two cases in North America will receive sustained attention (including site visits – see below): 1) the leveling of mountains in Appalachia (esp. Southern West Virginia, US) to expose coal; and 2) the scraping away of boreal forests in Northern Alberta, Canada, to expose the “tar sands” containing oil. Through readings, films, and direct experience during extended seminars at the two sites, students will consider the cultural, social, economic and health consequences of extreme extraction operations on those who live and work near these sites. In addition, the group will learn about efforts of activists to stop – or at least lessen – the negative effects on these communities.

Faculty

Deb Jackson, Professor of SoAn and HDSR, is a cultural anthropologist who has been researching environmental injustices over the past seven years, mainly related to the petrochemical industry and oil extraction.In Fall 2011 she led a Ford/Knight project titled “Living Downstream from the Tar Sands: The Case of Fort Chipewyan,” in which students conducted “virtual” ethnographic research on the effects of tar sands operations on First Nations people of the region. Through this project, she developed an interest in a similarly devastating case of extreme extraction much closer to home: the mountaintop removal (MTR) coal mining that is taking place in Appalachia. A brief visit in February2014 to a mountain justice organization in Southern West Virginia confirmed her sense that MTR results in ecological damage and environmental injustices of a similar kind, and on a similar scale, to those associated with the tar sands of Northern Alberta. This May term was conceived as a means of exploring these two North American cases of extreme extraction in relation to one another.

Locations and Living Arrangements

While Earlham College will serve as a home base for the program, there will be two excursions of about one week each to the two main sites. In Southern West Virginia, the group will stay at the Appalachian South Folklife Center where we will learn about traditions and lifeways of people of the region. While there, we will participate in meetings and tours with anti-MTR activists, take hikes on mountain trails, and make excursions to museums and other points of interest related to mountain culture and coal mining. The second trip, to Northern Alberta, will be split between two locations. In the small predominantly indigenous community of Fort Chipewyan, the group will camp out, visit a local museum to learn about the history of the people there, spend a day out on the land with a Native guide, talk with local residents and professionals about the effects of the tar sands on the community, and learn about some of the initiatives underway to address the problems resulting from tar sands mining. Then, in the city of Fort McMurray, students will stay in a motel and experience the “boom town” effect of massive growth brought on by tar sands development, and will take a tour of the tar sands operations.

Orientation

There will be 4 required orientation sessions during spring semester 2015. These sessions will cover logistics, provide background information on extreme extraction in general and on the two cases in particular, and allow students to become acquainted with the associated communities/cultures that will serve as a focus of the course.

Charges

The course fee for this May Term is $3,000, which covers all room and board (both on campus and off), roundtrip travel for each of the two excursions, entrance fees to museums and tours,and honoraria and contributions for individuals and organizations involved in the site visits. You will also be charged a non-refundable enrollment fee of $385.00. Earlham tuition fees apply if applicable.

Applications

Applications are available in the International Programs Office in LBC 131 and online at The deadline is October 15, 2014. Students will be interviewed individually as part of the application process.

Further Information

Contact Deb Jackson (, x 1225, LBC 329).

May Term Policies:

Program Plans Subject to Change