Since the announcement of the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL) in 2014, which was planned by Energy Transfer Partners for the transport and access of the Bakken oil fields, it has gained traction as a controversial initiative because of its environmental impact, the threat it poses to water supply and its effect on Native American sacred lands. Since August 2016, a group of protestors have been organizing on the Standing Rock Indian Reservation petitioning against the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and protesting at the actual site of the pipeline (). While the violence surrounding the pipeline is within itself shocking, the media coverage has been extremely polarized on the issue. Often falling along partisan lines, 鈥渓iberal鈥 news sources oppose the pipeline on humanitarian grounds and 鈥渃onservative鈥 sources support it, but both forms of media glean their conclusions about the pipeline from uncritical understandings of the conflict. Both sources ignore that, at the heart of the issue, are issues surrounding what private property is and the consequences of our chosen definition. Instead of taking for granted colloquial definitions of property we can see the underlying distributional inequality inherent to the pipeline by critically assessing how property and law interact.Read More »
Author: Chloe Sariego
Chloe Sariego is a senior at Sarah Lawrence College studying Political Economy and Sociology. She is a writer, activist and academic but in her spare time performs with the award-winning improv-comedy team Feral Christine. You can keep up with her at @chloesariego or send her an email at csariego@gm.slc.edu.