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British Columbia’s Community Benefits Agreement: Economic Justice for Indigenous Workers in Relation to Union Politics in Urban Infrastructure Projects
by
Berglund, Lisa
, Miles, Jodi
in
Agreements
/ Benefits
/ Canada Natives
/ Community
/ Community Benefits
/ Community involvement
/ Content analysis
/ Distributive justice
/ Economic development
/ Economic Opportunities
/ Economics
/ Eskimo Aleut Languages
/ Grammatical agreement
/ Indigenous peoples
/ Indigenous Personnel
/ Infrastructure
/ Justice
/ Labor
/ Labor contracts
/ Labor Force Development
/ Labor unions
/ Literature Reviews
/ Manual workers
/ Marginality
/ Native North Americans
/ Optimism
/ Periodicals
/ Politics
/ Projects
/ Reinforcement
/ Resource Allocation
/ School Policy
/ Self Determination
/ Unemployment
/ Urban areas
/ Urban development
/ Workers
2022
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British Columbia’s Community Benefits Agreement: Economic Justice for Indigenous Workers in Relation to Union Politics in Urban Infrastructure Projects
by
Berglund, Lisa
, Miles, Jodi
in
Agreements
/ Benefits
/ Canada Natives
/ Community
/ Community Benefits
/ Community involvement
/ Content analysis
/ Distributive justice
/ Economic development
/ Economic Opportunities
/ Economics
/ Eskimo Aleut Languages
/ Grammatical agreement
/ Indigenous peoples
/ Indigenous Personnel
/ Infrastructure
/ Justice
/ Labor
/ Labor contracts
/ Labor Force Development
/ Labor unions
/ Literature Reviews
/ Manual workers
/ Marginality
/ Native North Americans
/ Optimism
/ Periodicals
/ Politics
/ Projects
/ Reinforcement
/ Resource Allocation
/ School Policy
/ Self Determination
/ Unemployment
/ Urban areas
/ Urban development
/ Workers
2022
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Do you wish to request the book?
British Columbia’s Community Benefits Agreement: Economic Justice for Indigenous Workers in Relation to Union Politics in Urban Infrastructure Projects
by
Berglund, Lisa
, Miles, Jodi
in
Agreements
/ Benefits
/ Canada Natives
/ Community
/ Community Benefits
/ Community involvement
/ Content analysis
/ Distributive justice
/ Economic development
/ Economic Opportunities
/ Economics
/ Eskimo Aleut Languages
/ Grammatical agreement
/ Indigenous peoples
/ Indigenous Personnel
/ Infrastructure
/ Justice
/ Labor
/ Labor contracts
/ Labor Force Development
/ Labor unions
/ Literature Reviews
/ Manual workers
/ Marginality
/ Native North Americans
/ Optimism
/ Periodicals
/ Politics
/ Projects
/ Reinforcement
/ Resource Allocation
/ School Policy
/ Self Determination
/ Unemployment
/ Urban areas
/ Urban development
/ Workers
2022
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British Columbia’s Community Benefits Agreement: Economic Justice for Indigenous Workers in Relation to Union Politics in Urban Infrastructure Projects
Journal Article
British Columbia’s Community Benefits Agreement: Economic Justice for Indigenous Workers in Relation to Union Politics in Urban Infrastructure Projects
2022
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Overview
British Columbia’s Community Benefits Agreement that aims to provide jobs in the construction trades for underrepresented groups serves as a case to explore the successes and barriers to distributing the benefits of urban development to Indigenous groups towards the goal of economic justice. Through a content analysis of stakeholder interviews and documents about the agreement, we found that, while there is optimism that the CBA may help advance public discourse on economic justice for Indigenous Peoples, there are significant barriers that have gone unaddressed in this and other labor agreements due to a lack of community engagement. These include lack of transportation, continued marginalization of Indigenous workers into unskilled labor, and the reinforcement of dependence on non-Indigenous economies.
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