Prospective Students
Opportunities
Masters and/or PhD Opportunities
We are currently recruiting masters and/or PhD students to be part of our current research projects. Specific opportunities are listed below. However, we welcome all applications related to Arctic environmental change and governance.
Students will work in collaboration with and be mentored by EGC members. They will benefit from the dynamic and collaborative research environment provided by the Department of Environment and Geography and the broader university including the Centre for Earth Observation Science, the United Nations Academic Impact Hub for Sustainable Development Goal 6, the Centre for Human Rights Research and more.
If you are interested in working with us, please e-mail Nicole J. Wilson (Nicole.J.Wilson@umanitoba.ca).
For general inquires, please include the following:
-A copy of your CV.
-A brief introduction of yourself and outline of your research areas of interest.
Please note that only short-listed candidates will be contacted.
Funded Graduate Student Project on Water and Extractive Industries in Nunavut
Freshwater in the Canadian North is facing increasing pressures due to climate change and extractive industries, making sustainable water governance more important than ever. However, comparatively little research has examined decision-making about freshwater in the North. We are recruiting one Master’s student to develop a social science research project related to water and resource development in Nunavut. More specifically, the student will examine the role of water in the Nunavut Land Claims Agreement (Nunavut Land Claims Agreement, 1993) and decision-making in co-management institutions such as the Nunavut Impact Review Board and the Nunavut Water Board. This project will build on existing research and practice on Indigenous water governance or Indigenous relationships with water, governance systems and modes of interacting with decision-making processes about water, informed by historical and ongoing colonialism (e.g. Craft 2018; Daigle 2018; McGregor 2014; Wilson et al. 2021) including research conducted on water co-governance in other northern jurisdictions where modern land claim agreements are in place such as Yukon (Wilson, 2020, 2019). The research will contribute to debates about the evolving relationship between extraction and colonialism in the North (Bernauer, 2019; Hall, 2021; Scottie et al., 2022) as well as the opportunities and challenges created by resource co-management (Cameron & Kennedy, 2023; Dokis, 2016; Peletz et al., 2020).
Details
The student will be required to apply for admission to the Department of Environment and Geography at the University of Manitoba in Winnipeg, MB to commence studies in Fall 2025.
They will benefit from the dynamic and collaborative research environment provided by the department and the broader university including a community of research and practice related to sustainable and just water governance through the Environmental Governance and Change Lab, United Nations Academic Impact Hub for Sustainable Development Goal 6, the Centre for Human Rights Research and more.
The successful candidate will receive a Research Assistantship in the amount of $22,000 for two years. and will be required to apply for external funding (including University of Manitoba Graduate Fellowships, Tri-Council Awards, Northern Scientific Training Program grants, etc.).
The student will be co-supervised by Nicole J. Wilson and Warren Bernauer.
Qualifications
The successful applicant will have:
A bachelor’s degree in environmental studies, geography, or a similar field.
Familiarity with areas of study including water governance and policy, Indigenous governance, and resource development and Arctic studies.
Knowledge of social science research methods (qualitative, quantitative, and/or spatial).
Experience with, and commitment to, community engaged research and practice (ideally in partnership with Inuit or another Indigenous rightsholder group).
While all qualified candidates with relevant interests and experience are encouraged to apply, preference will be given to Indigenous applicants.
How to apply
Send a CV, unofficial transcript, and cover letter to Dr. Nicole J. Wilson (Nicole.J.Wilson@umanitoba.ca) and Dr. Warren Bernauer (warren.bernauer@umanitoba.ca) no later than October 1st, 2024.
References
Bernauer, W. (2019). The limits to extraction: Mining and colonialism in Nunavut. Canadian Journal of Development Studies / Revue Canadienne d’études Du Développement, 40(3), 404–422. https://doi.org/10.1080/02255189.2019.1629883
Cameron, E., & Kennedy, S. (2023). Can Environmental Assessment Protect Caribou? Analysis of EA in Nunavut, Canada, 1999-2019. Conservation and Society, 21(2), 121. https://doi.org/10.4103/cs.cs_54_22
Craft, A. (2018). Navigating Our Ongoing Sacred Legal Relationship with Nibi (Water). In A. Craft, B. L. Gunn, C. Knockwood, G. Christie, H. Askew, J. Borrows, J. Nichols, K. Wilkins, L. Chartrand, & O. Fitzgerald (Eds.), UNDRIP Implementation: More Reflections on the Braiding of International, Domestic and Indigenous Laws (pp. 53–62). Centre for International Governance Innovation. https://www.cigionline.org/sites/default/files/documents/UNDRIP%20Fall%202018%20lowres.pdf
Daigle, M. (2018). Resurging through Kishiichiwan: The spatial politics of Indigenous water relations. Decolonization: Indigeneity, Education & Society, 7(1), 159–172.
Dokis, C. A. (2016). Where the Rivers Meet: Pipelines, Participatory Resource Management, and Aboriginal-State Relations in the Northwest Territories (Reprint edition). UBC Press.
Hall, R. (2021). Indigenous/state relations and the “Making” of surplus populations in the mixed economy of Northern Canada. Geoforum, 126, 461–470. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoforum.2020.01.013
McGregor, D. (2014). Traditional Knowledge and Water Governance: The ethic of responsibility. AlterNative: An International Journal of Indigenous Peoples, 10(5), 493–507. https://doi.org/10.1177/117718011401000505
Nunavut Land Claims Agreement (1993). https://www.gov.nu.ca/sites/default/files/files/013%20-%20Nunavut-Land-Claims-Agreement-English.pdf
Peletz, N., Hanna, K., & Noble, B. (2020). The central role of Inuit Qaujimaningit in Nunavut’s impact assessment process. Impact Assessment and Project Appraisal, 38(5), 412–426. https://doi.org/10.1080/14615517.2020.1786763
Scottie, J., Bernauer, W., & Hicks, J. (2022). I Will Live for Both of Us: A History of Colonialism, Uranium Mining, and Inuit Resistance. University of Manitoba Press.
Wilson, N. J. (2019). “Seeing Water Like a State?”: Indigenous water governance through Yukon First Nation Self-Government Agreements. Geoforum, 104, 101–113. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoforum.2019.05.003
Wilson, N. J. (2020). Querying Water Co-Governance: Yukon First Nations and Water Governance in the Context of Modern Land Claim Agreements. Water Alternatives, 13(1), 93–118.
Wilson, N. J., Montoya, T., Arseneault, R., & Curley, A. (2021). Governing water insecurity: Navigating indigenous water rights and regulatory politics in settler colonial states. Water International, 46(6), 783–801. https://doi.org/10.1080/02508060.2021.1928972