Skip to main content
Advanced Search

Filters: Tags: A1-Native-Aboriginal Ways (X) > Types: Downloadable (X)

18 results (336ms)   

View Results as: JSON ATOM CSV
thumbnail
Although tribes are recognized as "domestic dependent nations" with inherent sovereignty over their own affairs, the U.S. government has accepted various trust responsibilities such as protecting tribal rights and resources. Based on this "trust" relationship, the Department of Defense (DoD) has been working to conduct meaningful government-to-government consultation on projects/policies that may have implications for tribes. This study addresses the question "Have government-to-government relations changed since the publishing of DoD's American Indian/Alaska Native Policy?" and documents the experiences of those involved in the process. Methodology used is solely qualitative in nature consisting of analyzing policy...
thumbnail
In partnership with the community of Huslia, Alaska, I analyzed both the practices of wildlife biology and Koyukon traditional management practices for two species whose distributions include the Koyukuk-Nowitna National Wildlife Refuge Complex: moose (Alces alces gigas ) and greater white-fronted geese (Anser albifrons frontalis ). Both species are important for subsistence and sport hunting, but their ranges and migrations necessitate different scales and structures of management. Moose require state-wide cooperation, while geese also require national and international scales of management. Using ethnographies of scientific practice, observation, and semi-structured interviews, I explain how different groups of...
thumbnail
The purpose of this research was to critically engage a contemporary means by which impacts to Indigenous health are gauged during federal and/or provincial environmental assessments (EAs). Specifically, I was interested in the utility of health impact assessments (HIAs) conducted during environmental assessments, which concern the effects of mining on First Nations communities. For this research, I dialogued with participants from the Tl'azt'en nation in order to learn their opinions and concerns about the impact of industrial development on health from an Indigenous world-view perspective. An Indigenous methodological research design was followed and participants were recruited to share their perspectives on health...


    map background search result map search result map Tribal wilderness research needs and issues in the United States and Canada Making forest management work in the Gwich'in settlement area, Northwest Territories "How do you measure the loss of a lake?": Assessing community relevance of health impact assessment frameworks to the Tl'azt'en nation of northern-interior British Columbia Consultation with Aboriginal Peoples: Impacts on the Petroleum Industry Area Management Report for the Recreational Fisheries of the Northern Kenai Peninsula, 2000 and 2001 Bridging two worlds: Government-to-government between the Department of Defense and federally recognized tribes in Athabascan Country, Alaska Climate Change in Northern Canada Knowledges that 'travel': Indigenous-Western expertise and the 'nature' of wildlife management in the Alaskan boreal forest Climate change in our backyard II conference report Respect for Grizzly Bears: an Aboriginal Approach for Co-existence and Resilience Traditional Ecological Knowledge and Harvest Survey of Nonsalmon Fish in the Middle Yukon River Region, Alaska, 2005-2008 Assessing cumulative human impacts on northern woodland caribou with traditional ecological knowledge and resource selection functions Environmental change and traditional use of the Old Crow Flats in northern Canada: an IPY opportunity to meet the challenges of the new northern research paradigm An Oral History of Habitat Use by Cook Inlet Belugas in Waters of the Kenai Peninsula Borough: Final Report Forest Management Plan For Native Allotments in the Doyon Region of Alaska Aboriginal self-determination and resource development activity Integrating local knowledge and science: economic consequences of driftwood harvest in a changing climate Area Management Report for the Recreational Fisheries of the Northern Kenai Peninsula, 2000 and 2001 Assessing cumulative human impacts on northern woodland caribou with traditional ecological knowledge and resource selection functions Environmental change and traditional use of the Old Crow Flats in northern Canada: an IPY opportunity to meet the challenges of the new northern research paradigm Climate change in our backyard II conference report Knowledges that 'travel': Indigenous-Western expertise and the 'nature' of wildlife management in the Alaskan boreal forest An Oral History of Habitat Use by Cook Inlet Belugas in Waters of the Kenai Peninsula Borough: Final Report Making forest management work in the Gwich'in settlement area, Northwest Territories Bridging two worlds: Government-to-government between the Department of Defense and federally recognized tribes in Athabascan Country, Alaska Traditional Ecological Knowledge and Harvest Survey of Nonsalmon Fish in the Middle Yukon River Region, Alaska, 2005-2008 Forest Management Plan For Native Allotments in the Doyon Region of Alaska Integrating local knowledge and science: economic consequences of driftwood harvest in a changing climate "How do you measure the loss of a lake?": Assessing community relevance of health impact assessment frameworks to the Tl'azt'en nation of northern-interior British Columbia Consultation with Aboriginal Peoples: Impacts on the Petroleum Industry Climate Change in Northern Canada Aboriginal self-determination and resource development activity Respect for Grizzly Bears: an Aboriginal Approach for Co-existence and Resilience Tribal wilderness research needs and issues in the United States and Canada