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Settler Cannabis: From Gold Rush to Green Rush in Indigenous Northern California

Indigenous Confluences

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Settler Cannabis: From Gold Rush to Green Rush in Indigenous Northern California

By: Kaitlin P. Reed
Narrated by: Charlotte Flyte
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Summary

Young countercultural back-to-the-land settlers flocked to northwestern California beginning in the 1960s, and by the 1970s, unregulated cannabis production proliferated on Indigenous lands. As of 2021, the California cannabis economy was valued at $3.5 billion. In Settler Cannabis, Kaitlin Reed demonstrates how this "green rush" is only the most recent example of settler colonial resource extraction and wealth accumulation. Situating the cannabis industry within this broader legacy, the author traces patterns of resource rushing—first gold, then timber, then fish, and now cannabis—to reveal the ongoing impacts on Indigenous cultures, lands, waters, and bodies.

Reed shares this history to inform the path toward an alternative future, one that starts with the return of land to Indigenous stewardship and rejects the commodification and control of nature for profit. Combining archival research with testimonies and interviews with tribal members, tribal employees, and settler state employees, Settler Cannabis offers a groundbreaking analysis of the environmental consequences of cannabis cultivation that foregrounds Indigenous voices, experiences, and histories.

©2023 the University of Washington Press (P)2023 Tantor Media
Americas Colonialism & Post-Colonialism Environment Indigenous Peoples Nature & Ecology Outdoors & Nature Politics & Government Science Social Sciences State & Local United States Marijuana
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