School of Health Sciences, University of Northern British Columbia, Prince George, BC, Canada; Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
School of Health Sciences, University of Northern British Columbia, Prince George, BC, Canada; Geography Program, University of Northern British Columbia, Prince George, BC, Canada.
Soc Sci Med. 2021 May;277:113899. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2021.113899. Epub 2021 Apr 3.
Patterns of research on resource extraction's health effects display problematic gaps and underlying assumptions, indicating a need to situate health knowledge production in the context of disciplinary, corporate and neocolonial influences and structures. This paper reports on a modified metanarrative synthesis of 'storylines' of research on resource extraction and health in the Canadian context. Peer-reviewed articles on mining or petroleum extraction and health published between 2000 and 2018 and dealing with Canadian populations or policies (n = 87) were identified through a systematic literature search. Coding identified main disciplinary traditions, methodologies and approaches for judging high-quality research. Underlying assumptions were analyzed in terms of models of health and well-being; resource extraction's political economic drivers; and representations of Indigenous peoples, territories and concerns. Findings included a preponderance of occupational and environmental health studies; frequent presentation of resource extraction without political economic antecedents, and as a major contributor to Canadian society; sustainable development aspirations to mitigate health impacts through voluntary private-sector governance activities; representations of Indigenous peoples and concerns ranging from complete absence to engagement with legacies of historical trauma and environmental dispossession; and indictment of corporate (especially asbestos industry) and government malfeasance in a subset of studies. Canada's world-leading mining sector, petroleum reserves and population health traditions, coupled with colonial legacies in both domestic and overseas mining and petroleum development, make these insights relevant to broader efforts for health equity in relation to resource extraction. They suggest a need for strengthened application of the precautionary principle in relation to resource extraction; nuanced attention to corporate influences on the production of health science; more profound challenges to dominant economic development models; and extension of well-intentioned efforts of researchers and policymakers working within flawed institutions.
资源开采对健康影响的研究模式显示出存在问题的差距和潜在假设,表明有必要将健康知识的生产置于学科、企业和新殖民主义影响和结构的背景下。本文报告了对加拿大背景下资源开采与健康研究的“故事线”进行修正的元叙述综合分析。通过系统的文献检索,确定了 2000 年至 2018 年间发表的关于采矿或石油开采与健康的同行评审文章,涉及加拿大人口或政策(n=87)。编码确定了判断高质量研究的主要学科传统、方法和方法。根据健康和福祉模型、资源开采的政治经济驱动因素以及对土著人民、领土和关切的描述,分析了潜在假设。研究结果包括职业和环境卫生研究居多;频繁地呈现资源开采,而没有政治经济前提,并且是加拿大社会的主要贡献者;可持续发展的愿望通过私营部门的自愿治理活动来减轻健康影响;从完全缺席到参与历史创伤和环境剥夺的遗产,对土著人民和关切的描述各不相同;在一些研究中,谴责企业(特别是石棉行业)和政府的不法行为。加拿大在矿业和石油领域的世界领先地位、石油储备和国内及海外矿业和石油开发的殖民遗产,使这些见解与资源开采方面的健康公平更广泛的努力相关。它们表明需要加强对资源开采的预防原则的应用;细致关注企业对健康科学产生的影响;更深刻地挑战主导的经济发展模式;并扩展研究人员和政策制定者在有缺陷的机构中开展的善意努力。