This is the first major publication sequence in the rebuild. It treats Alberta not as an isolated political argument, but as a province embedded in trade systems, energy markets, urban growth, logistics, and comparative federalism. The series crosses multiple geography domains on purpose.

Explore the underlying forces that shape the province.

Series

Alberta In Context

Economic geography is the backbone here, but the sequence also reaches into urban geography and infrastructure when the argument demands it.

Current articles12
Domainseconomic geography, urban geography, infrastructure
Reading modeeditorial sequence

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Article 1

A Trade Reality Check

The basic ledger: production, exports, interprovincial trade, and fiscal contribution.

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Article 2

The Texas Of The North

A comparative frame for Alberta, Texas, and Oklahoma, and what American-style federalism really means.

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Article 3

Contested Ground

The global oil market Alberta actually sells into: sanctions, wars, shadow fleets, and the renewable buildout.

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Article 4

Landlocked By Default

The structural transport penalty of Alberta's inland geography across rail, road, and air.

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Article 5

The Burning Strait

A systems view of chokepoint activation, supply chain propagation, and the asymmetric geography of oil dependence.

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Article 6

Alberta's Pipeline Geography

The measured infrastructure map behind Alberta's long-running pipeline argument.

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Article 7

Rockets And Feathers

Alberta gasoline pricing as a live case study in market structure, replacement cost, and consumer frustration.

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Article 7A

The Checkout Problem

Why a province that grows food, raises cattle, and refines fuel still pays stubbornly high grocery prices.

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Article 8

Alberta Calling

The population surge Alberta campaigned for, and the politics that followed once it arrived.

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Later In Sequence

Two Front Doors And A Mountain

Tourism geography through gateways, seasonal concentration, mountain bottlenecks, and the pressure of arrival.

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Later In Sequence

Hidden In Plain Sight

Calgary's urban nature as load-bearing infrastructure in a fast-growing metropolitan region.

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Article 10

After The Burning Strait

The late-March regime that emerges when a chokepoint does not reopen but instead becomes selectively governed.

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Why This Is A Series

The sequence is held together by its question, not by one narrow domain: what does Alberta look like when we stop talking about it as a grievance and start situating it inside the systems that shape it?

Economic Geography Urban Geography All Articles