Map of the Muskrat Falls Hydroelectric Project
Foreword | Warren Cariou
Introduction: How a Public Utility Became a “Predatory Formation” | Stephen Crocker
Section One: The Threat Downstream: A Sacrifice Zone in Labrador
Hydraulic Imperialism and the Infrastructure of Canadian Colonialism | Shiri Pasternak
Exploring the Health and Well-being Concerns of Labrador Land Protectors | Jessica Penney
“Industrial Colonization”: Muskrat Falls in a Settler-Colonial Context | Neria Aylward
Muskrat Falls: Methylmercury, Food Security, and Canadian Hydroelectric Development | Ryan S. D. Calder, Amina T. Schartup, Trevor Bell, and Elsie M. Sunderland
Stability of the North Spur at Muskrat Falls | Stig Bernander and Lennart Elfgren
Section Two: Political Economy of an “Investment without Economics”
Because Financialization: How Muskrat Falls Can Succeed as an Investment and Fail as a Public Utility | Stephen Crocker
Will Muskrat Falls Pay Dividends? | David Vardy
Muskrat Falls: Investment without Economics | James P. Feehan
Section Three: Representing and Resisting the Crisis: Journalism, Art, and Fiction
Muskrat Falls and the Imperative to Decolonize Journalism | Justin Brake
Criminalizing Journalism: Justin Brake and The Independent | Robin Whitaker
Confronting Recklessness: The Role of the Uncle Gnarley Blog | Des Sullivan
Art and Activism at Muskrat Falls | Jennifer Dyer
Embodying Crisis | Lisa Moore
Words Spoken before All Others: Ashes and Penance | Gerald Vaandering
The Fever | Rhonda Pelley
When She Said to Decolonize | Tracey Doherty