1. Bill McKibben, “Worried? Us?” in “This Overheating World,” Granta, issue 83, Autumn 2003, https://granta.com/worried-us/ (accessed 17 May 2023).
2. Bill McKibben, “Expanding the Fossil Fuel Resistance,” in A Line in the Tar Sands: Struggles for Environmental Justice, ed. Toban Black, Stephen D’Arcy, Tony Weis, and Joshua Kahn Russell (Toronto: Between the Lines, 2014), 279–285, 280–281.
3. Naomi Klein and Bill McKibben, “Foreword,” in A Line in the Tar Sands: Struggles for Environmental Justice, ed. Toban Black, Stephen D’Arcy, Tony Weis, and Joshua Kahn Russell (Toronto: Between the Lines, 2014), xvii–xviii. In another (co-authored) work, McKibben acknowledges that “We must work with and learn from Indigenous communities to create systems and societies in better harmony with the land.” James P. Healy, Anpotowin Jensen, Maria Belen Power, Bill McKibben, Gary Cohen, and Gaurab Basu, “COVID-19 and Climate Change: Crises of Structural Racism,” Journal of Climate Change and Health 5 (2022), n.p. McKibben also notably wrote the foreword to the Inuk activist Sheila Watt-Cloutier’s memoir The Right to be Cold, where he stressed the cultural impacts of climate change on Indigenous people of the north and celebrated the recent upsurge in Indigenous environmentalism. Yet, in this foreword, McKibben did not focus on the flawed epistemological foundations of Western science. Instead, he placed primary importance on “build[ing] movements, ones powerful enough to force the policy changes that give us our only hope of catching up with physics.” “Foreword,” in The Right to Be Cold: One Woman’s Story of Protecting Her Culture, the Arctic and the Whole Planet, new ed., ed. Sheila Watt-Cloutier (Toronto: Penguin, 2016), xiv–xv.
4. Heather Igloliorte, “Arctic Culture/Global Indigeneity,” in Negotiations in a Vacant Lot: Studying the Visual in Canada, ed. L. Jessup, E. Morton, K. Robertson (Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2014), 150–170, 151.
5. Quoted in Frank James Tester and Piita Irniq, "Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit: Social History, Politics and the Practice of Resistance," Arctic 61.4 (2008): 48-61, 49