Exercise #4: Documentary Reflection
Instructions
For your fourth Exercise assignment, you will make connections between the environmental movement in the recent past and today by considering what you are challenged to learn from documentarians of that movement.
- Find a current or recent report in the mainstream or alternative media of an environmental topic or issue in your local or wider region. As you read/ hear about the issue, consider where you stand on it. Identify your position and your thoughts.
- Use the documentaries in this course unit to reflect on the role that civil disobedience has played in the history of environmentalism, researching one other recent example to defend your answer to the question of whether it works to bring positive change.
Use your research in the mainstream and alternative media from Activity 1 of this unit for this exercise Post the media links and your analysis. Aim for a minimum of 300 words.
Please note, you should write and edit your submission in a separate file then copy and paste it into the submission box. Once submitted to the HIST 3991 trubox site, you will not be able to edit your post.
Are you a student of HIST 3991? Click here to add a submission to this assignment.
Submissions
Documentary Reflection
March 21, 2023 By: Allegra Solecki
I chose this article for several reasons, the main one being that it covers environmental issues in Ontario where I currently reside, and in British Columbia, where I’m from. The protest occurred at the Junos Awards in Edmonton earlier this month, where Ever Hatherly, a member of the group On to Ottawa, jumped on stage topless while Avril Lavigne was speaking. Hatherly wanted to bring attention to a huge issue across Canada right now – loss of carbon sinks. In British Columbia, old growth forests are continuously being logged, and in Ontario, Ford’s government is allowing parts of the Greenbelt,…
Documentary Reflection
March 17, 2023 By: Yang Ni
Environmental movement groups started their advocacy functionalities ever since in the 19th century. In order to bring attention to the environmental issues at hand, most environmental movements have adopted the application of civil disobedience.1 Civil disobedience strategies applied range from non-violence demonstrations, riots and arson that have made several activists on the wrong side of the law. Over recent times, advocacy groups have been lobbying for environmental conservation in North America. 2 They believed there should be a balance between economic benefits and environmental conservation of natural resources since industrial and agricultural revolutions contribute to air, water and land pollution. The reflection will…
Documentary Reflection
March 16, 2023 By: Keith Gracey
In this story a local MPP Wayne Gates and an environmental activist Owen Bjorgan make statements at a town council meeting, they were speaking against the new Ontario Bill 23 which was pushed through the Provincial Parliament in 2022 against the expressed wishes of a very vocal majority of Ontario residents. The Ontario green belt was created in the early 2000’s with broad bipartisan support in order to arrest urban sprawl, protect local watersheds, and at-risk species. I believe it is important to know that these speakers are not opposed to the creation of new homes but rather, the reduction…
exercise 4
March 13, 2023 By: Jiayi Han
There was a three-year construction activity in my hometown, aiming to change the dirty and messy phenomenon in the city and improve the beauty and modernisation of the urban environment. The urban village in the city centre was demolished, and all the villagers moved to a new community on the outskirts of the city. Many of the remnants of the last century have also been redecorated, with the same shape as the signboard and layout, but have lost their ancient characteristics. As a person born and raised in the 21st century, I absolutely support this construction activity. It brings me…
Documentary Reflection
March 6, 2023 By: Jason Senna
I found recent reports about Teck Resources and its subsidiary, Teck Coal, a Canadian coal-mining company “facing the largest fine imposed under the Fisheries Act after pleading guilty to contaminating waterways in southeastern British Columbia.” This fine is $60 million. A CBC article mentions federal prosecutor Alexander Clarkson making a pronouncement in B.C. provincial court. “Teck Coal did not exercise all due diligence to prevent the deposit of coal mine waste, despite Teck Coal being aware that selenium and calcite could environmentally harm” the Fording River. An ESE Magazine article mentions, “Teck Coal Ltd failing to get its Fording River…