Conference Report: The Industrialization of Rivers in Comparative Perspective
L’Industrialisation des Rivieres: perspectives comparées /
The Industrialization of Rivers in Comparative Perspective
September 24-26, 2009
Trois-Rivières, Musée québécois de culture populaire
Shawinigan, La Cité de l'énergie
L’Industrialisation des Rivieres: perspectives comparées / The Industrialization of Rivers in Comparative Perspective Conference brought together 20 scholars interested in the multiple processes of waterways transformations and human interaction with fluvial environments to a workshop meeting in Montréal, Trois-Rivières and Shawinigan, Québec, in late September, 2009. The organizer, Stéphane Castonguay of the Universite de Québec à Trois Rivières, with the assistance of Matthew Evenden of the University of British Columbia (both co-leaders of the Canadian Water History Project, NiCHE Projet sur l’histoire de l’eau au Canada), invited an international group of participants to reflect on three basic historical issues relating to the modern manipulation and management of rivers: Connections between the City and its Hinterlands, Modifications of Urban Space and Relationships with Nature.
The papers presented at the workshop pointed to the topical and analytical breadth of research on the industrialization of rivers, a concept originally advanced by Swedish historian Eva Jakobsson to underline the transformative outcomes of human social, economic and ecological interactions with rivers. The unconventional format, which allowed participants to comment directly on co-panelists’ work, encouraged critical engagement with the central analytical questions of scale, environmental conflict and the politics of nature. While most of the work was regional or national in scale, participants were encouraged to reflect on comparative possibilities in their own work and in the commentaries on others’ work in the hopes that transnational similarities and points of tension would emerge.
Day One
The conference began with a session on the planning and development of networks that emerged as cities expanded and began to dominate the fluvial ecology of surrounding areas. Major regional cities attempted to regulate rivers to match their own changing metabolisms and, as a result, the new hydrologic regimes that were created out of planning and industrial development were both cultural and natural. Smaller regional centres and rural areas were often at the mercy of larger market forces and the bureaucratic muscle of key cities. Often, these socioeconomic factors conspired to foist an unequal burden of pollution onto adjacent areas while hindering access to water and its urban infrastructure. The second session focused on the sociotechnical regimes of management in Paris, Montreal and Brussels. While dealing with different periods, the participants all sought to analyse the metropolitan-hinterland dynamics that emerged out of the industrialization of tributary rivers with the watershed of, and for the benefit of, major cities.
Day Two
The first session of the day extended the conversation on metabolisms and urban-river networks. Participants looked at the changing articulations of the Seine in Paris and the Danube in Vienna with a keen eye to riparian land use planning as a significant driver in the spatial and industrial growth of cities. The second session brought questions of scale to the forefront, while challenging some of the accepted orthodoxies of river history as originally forwarded by Richard White in The Organic Machine. Contributors unpacked the construction of the watershed as a unit of analysis, and perhaps more fundamentally, problematized the notion of the watershed as a unit of scientific practice. The third session dealt directly with the multiple conflicts that emerge out of attempts to develop rivers. Participants tackled the problems of conflicts from disparate directions: within the salvage archaeology discourse; within the political and diplomatic manoeuvring in a transboundary river region; and through the complex intersections of environmental, corporate and indigenous rights-based logics.
Day Three
The first session focused on nature and its perceived degradation in industrializing contexts. Research on the wetlands of the St. Lawrence argued against scientific convention to show how writing about the nature of and risks to the wetlands had undergone a profound paradigm shift in concert with a changing social/environmental consciousness in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Research on the Ohio River focused on the rhetorical power of the scientific discourse of risk and hazards. The enabling power of industrialization in the realm of disaster history was analysed through the prism of uncertainty and vulnerability to show how that understanding shaped assessment and management. The conference wrapped up with a session designed to synthesize common themes, encourage further reflections in problematic analytical areas and push contributions in profitable new directions. Among the more vital of the many incisive points raised, the two commentators asked contributors to pay more attention to spatial scale, to reflect on the different conditions of property ownership, to anticipate the possible comparative dimensions in their work and to consider the moral tone embedded in the stories they are telling.
Participants also engaged in two field trips. On Day Two in Shawinigan, the group spent the latter portion of the afternoon at the Cité de l'énergie Museum, a sprawling, popular facility designed as a catalyst for the region’s revitalizing economy and a talisman for the fading energy- and manufacturing-based economy of the last century. The final afternoon found the group on the south shore of the St. Lawrence en route to Lac Saint Pierre where we met Historical Geographer Rodolphe de Koninck, who spoke about his long interest in the confluence between the geomorphology of the area and its socioeconomic history. A ferry trip and drive through the islands prompted reflections on the long social and environmental history of the region as it changed from an agricultural to a tourism-based economy.
The three days of fruitful discussion will lead to a collective volume. But the discussion also forwarded debate on the myriad problems associated with the industrialization of rivers and forged international research connections sure to push dialogue in compelling new directions.
Thanks!
We would like to acknowledge the financial support of the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, NiCHE, the Centre interuniversitaire d'études québécoises (UQTR), the Canada Research Chair in Environmental History (UQTR), the Dean of Research and Graduate Studies (UQTR), and the Quebec Studies Program
(McGill University).
L’Industrialisation des Rivieres / Industrialization of Rivers
24- 26 Sept, 2009: How have rivers been put to work? What technologies have transformed their flow regimes? In what ways do rivers serve as the sanitary systems of cities? Stephane Castonguay will host a conference on the industrialization of rivers supported by the water history project and a grant from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada . The conference addresses particular cases in North America and Europe and will build a broad comparative perspective. Bringing together invited participants from North America and Europe, the conference will travel to meeting sites and field locations in Montreal, Trois-Rivières and Shawinigan as well as places in-between. Following the conference, Castonaguay and Evenden will edit the proceedings as a book. For further information, please contact Stéphane Castonguay (Stephane.Castonguay@uqtr.ca) or Matthew Evenden (mevenden@interchange.ubc.ca).
Click here to view the poster (pdf).

Site C Forum Published
The future of BC energy policy turns to a considerable extent on the possibility of further hydro development on the Peace River at Site C. For decades Site C has been a controversial flash point amongst Peace Valley residents, environmentalists and politicians. In November 2008, the Canadian Water History Project organized a special workshop on the proposed dam, its history and its possible effects. The meeting brought together representatives of First Nations communities and environmental organizations in the Peace region with academics from BC and elsewhere who study electricity, water history and public policy. At the end of the meeting, participants were invited to submit op-eds for a special forum section of the journal, BC Studies. That forum has just been published in the Spring 2009 issue. Although only the paper version is available, electronic versions of the op-eds should soon be made available on the BC Studies website.
Site C Website Launched

In the Fall term, 2008, a seminar of UBC Geography students conducted a class project on the proposed Site C dam on the Peace River. After researching various aspects of the proposal and the history of the Peace River, they wrote research reports, prepared web copy, gathered photographs and built a website. This is how they described their project: "The Peace River is distant from us in so many ways. None of us have seen it. But its potential development affects us all. We all need to think about this river and this proposal. This is our attempt to think, to see the river."
Follow this link to have a look at their efforts and learn more about the Site C:
Site C Workshop
Recently, the CWHP/PHEC, in association with Green College and the Department of Geography, University of British Columbia, hosted a workshop to consider the proposed Site C Dam on the Peace River in northern British Columbia.
As a Site C Dam will have a range of ramifications and emerges from a complex social and environmental history, the CWHP/PHEC decided that it would provide a useful focus for discussion, linking academic researchers with community participants. Over the course of a day, participants considered the historical background to the Site C proposal, and debated the merits and difficulties of the current proposal. Although the workshop was closed to foster a small group discussion atmosphere, some of the positions of the participants will soon be made publicly available. Several participants will prepare Op/Eds about Site C which will be published in a future issue of BC STUDIES.
Site C Background:
In its latest BC Energy Plan, the provincial government calls upon BC Hydro to study the feasibility of a development at Site C and to communicate widely with the public about the issue. At time of writing, BC Hydro is engaged with a broad consultation to potentially affected communities.
The Peace River was first dammed in the late 1960s when the mammoth W.A.C. Bennett Dam created the largest human-made lake in North America. The Peace Canyon Dam followed downriver. Since that time, considerable controversy has surrounded the environmental effects of river regulation and their social consequences. When BC Hydro first considered moving forward with the Site C Dam in the late 1970s, a diverse environmental coalition formed to block the project. Ultimately, the BC Utilities Commission canceled the project owing to perceived failings in BC Hydro’s electricity forecasting. In the current context of rising provincial population and energy demand, the Site C dam has re-emerged as a potential solution to looming electricity generation problems. What the potential costs, benefits and incidental effects of such a solution might be remain controversial.
Participants included:
Gerry Attachie, Councilor, Doig River First Nation, on behalf of Council of Western Treaty 8 Chiefs
Michael Church, Professor Emeritus, Geography, UBC
Marjorie Griffin Cohen, Professor, Political Science and Women’s Studies, SFU
Laurie Dickmeyer, MA Student, Geography, UBC
Nichole Dusyk, PhD student, Resources, Environment and Sustainability, UBC
Matthew Evenden, Associate Professor, Geography, UBC
Ken Forest, Peace Valley Environment Association
Tina Loo, Professor and Canada Research Chair, History, UBC
Jeremy Mouat, Professor, History, University of Alberta
Shona Nelson, Administrator and Director of Treaty and Aboriginal Rights Research, Treaty 8 Tribal Assoc.
Alex Netherton, Professor, Political Science, Vancouver Island University
Adrienne Peacock, Professor, Biology, Douglas College
Jonathon Peyton, PhD student, Geography, UBC.
