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Distributed for University of British Columbia Press

Extracting Decline

Resource Development and Mobile Labour in Canada

With a Foreword by Graeme Wynn

This incisive study traces the hidden costs of Canada’s oil economy and the often-overlooked experiences of its workers who travel thousands of miles from the Maritimes to make a living.  

The oil sands in Alberta are known around the world, but less visible are the workers who sustain the province’s oil and gas industry. Extracting Decline investigates how it became normal for workers to travel thousands of kilometers from Canada’s Maritime region to make a living in the oil field.

Katie Mazer reveals the intimate links between regional underdevelopment and Canada’s extractive economy. In the decades after World War II, the Canadian state identified the Maritimes as a national problem. Framing the region’s rural economies as unviable, policy-makers worked to remake the Maritimes to fit a modern vision of the national economy.

Weaving together welfare and rural development policy, political economy, and workers’ lived experiences, Extracting Decline documents how the devaluation of non-capitalist economies has helped transform land and labor for extraction. While the Maritime region has long been denigrated for its economic failure, Extracting Decline ultimately argues that it holds lessons for imagining a more just and sustainable world.


368 pages | 5 b&w photos, 5 maps, 6 charts | 6 x 9 | © 2026

Nature | History | Society

Economics and Business: Business--Industry and Labor, Economics--Agriculture and Natural Resources

Geography: Social and Political Geography


Reviews

“Theoretically sophisticated and deeply affecting, Extracting Decline gives readers a clear sense of the totality of this interdependent political economy of the Maritimes and Western Canada, and the lives it shapes and reshapes.”

Don Mitchell, Department of Human Geography, Uppsala University

Extracting Decline is an extraordinary book. Mazer shows us how regional development and underdevelopment are connected, peels back the curtain on what it’s actually like to work in the oil sands, and opens up important questions about what we owe each other and what a decent life can look like.”

Emilie Cameron, Department of Geography and Environmental Studies, Carleton University

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