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Community Development Journal Advance Access published online on July 27, 2007

Community Development Journal, doi:10.1093/cdj/bsm027
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© Oxford University Press and Community Development Journal. 2007 All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Contradictions in hinterland development: challenging the local development ideal in Northern British Columbia

Sean Markey, Greg Halseth and Don Manson

Address for correspondence: Sean Markey, Centre for Sustainable Community Development, Simon Fraser University, 14th Floor, Central City Tower, 13450 102 Avenue, Surrey, BC, Canada V3T 5X3; email: spmarkey{at}sfu.ca

Northern British Columbia, Canada, has undergone a considerable economic, social, and cultural transformation over recent decades. Specifically, economic and political restructuring processes have destabilized commitments to community infrastructure and exacerbated the variability of boom and bust patterns across the north. This paper, drawn from ongoing regional research, provides a critique of emerging arguments that advocate for greater levels of local control over northern development to address these development challenges. Our research reveals strong sentiments from northern people and agencies to construct ‘made in the north’ solutions. Findings illustrate, however, that the assumptions inherent within such calls for local and regional development require critical review.


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