121 results
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2. PAPERS TO APPEAR.
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INUIT , *PASSERIFORMES , *ARCHIPELAGOES , *DOLPHINS , *STRAITS - Published
- 2023
3. Co-management as an Ethical Space of Engagement: Prospects for Reconciliation in Vuntut National Park.
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Bruce, Kai and Mulrennan, Monica
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NATIONAL parks & reserves , *FIRST Nations of Canada , *RECONCILIATION - Abstract
Parks Canada's commitments to reconciliation marks a significant shift in the governing paradigm of national parks, moving away from a colonial framework towards models that respect and elevate Indigenous forms of governance and knowledge systems. However, the extent to which a land claims-based co-management model, as the dominant mechanism of governance and engagement employed by Parks Canada, can serve as a vehicle for reconciliation is an open question. This paper endeavours to better understand the relational dynamics of co-management for their potential to advance reconciliation in national park settings. Using the lens of ethical space, we identify factors that either facilitate or impede relationship building between Vuntut Gwitchin First Nation and Parks Canada in the co-management of Vuntut National Park. Insights from semi-structured interviews conducted in 2021 with 11 community members and park managers indicate that an evolvingmanagement relationship is sustained through extensive community engagement and Parks Canada's support for strengthening community connections to the land. By adopting an ethical space framework for analysis, we were able to highlight different conditions and elements necessary for a protected-area co-management arrangement to serve as a solid foundation for reconciliation. Our analysis also revealed various structural impediments to the establishment of an ethical space conducive to reconciliation, particularly in the context of co-management arrangements based on land-claims agreements. These challenges included: discrepancies in approaches to protected-area management between Vuntut Gwitchin First Nation and Parks Canada, further complicated by the governance system employed by Parks Canada; issues of scale related to Parks Canada's nested management structure, which affected relationship building between co-managers; financial constraints; and capacity constraints. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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4. Cash Economy and Store-Bought Food Biases in Food Security Assessments of Inuit Nunangat.
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Naylor, Angus W., Kenny, Tiff-Annie, Furga, Chris, Warltier, Duncan W., and Little, Matthew
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CANADIAN Inuit , *FOOD security , *INDIGENOUS peoples , *CULTURAL values , *MIXED economy - Abstract
Researchers, community organizations, and Inuit leaders increasingly question the suitability of methods to assess the prevalence of food insecurity in Inuit Nunangat (the Inuit homeland in Canada). Particularly contentious is the US Department of Agriculture's (USDA) Household Food Security Survey Module (HFSSM). The HFSSM is applied in modified form as part of Health Canada's nationwide Canadian Community Health (CCHS) and Aboriginal Peoples Surveys. The 18-question HFSSM is the primary survey tool used by the Government of Canada to assess food security prevalence. Yet the HFSSM asks only about the affordability of store-bought foods (also termed "market foods" elsewhere in the literature) when collecting data to designate food security status. This is despite communities in Inuit Nunangat having complex dual or mixed food systems, that is, they rely on foods harvested from ancestral lands (country foods) in combination with store-bought foods to sustain mixed cash-subsistence economies and diets. Sourcing country foods requires money for the purchase of equipment and machinery. However, country foods also have numerous access and availability criteria dictated by non-financial factors. In this paper, we explore the problem of the monetary bias (the focus on an individual or household's ability to purchase foods) in the HFSSM and discuss the knock-on effects of using monetary metrics as the sole means of measuring and monitoring food security in dual food environments. We contend that relying on monetary access as a measure presents an incomplete picture of the reality of food insecurity in Inuit Nunangat. Presently, there is little consideration of the nuance of social norms and cultural values that govern dual food systems or the importance of less tangible, non-financial factors that might affect food access (e.g., knowledge of where and how to harvest and of machine maintenance, suitable environmental conditions for travel, conducive harvest regulations, social relationships, ecological stability). Ultimately, this contributes to restricted policy-level understandings of what it means to ensure stable, culturally adequate, and just food systems, and limits self-determination in northern food environments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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5. Integrating Oral History and Archaeology of the 1845 Franklin Expedition: The Case From Kungearkbeearu.
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Stenton, Douglas R. and Park, Robert W.
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ORAL history , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations , *HISTORIC sites , *INUIT ,NORTHWEST Passage - Abstract
Attempts to accurately reconstruct events that occurred during the final phases of the 1845 Franklin Northwest Passage expedition face a key challenge: how to address inconsistencies and, in some cases, contradictions between historical descriptions of sites and the archaeological evidence they contain. This paper examines the case of site NcLa-1 at Kungearkbeearu, on the Simpson Strait coast of King William Island, for which the Inuit oral history seems incompatible with archaeological interpretations. New archaeological data from the site provide an enhanced framework within which to evaluate both the oral history and archaeology of NcLa-1. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
6. PAPERS TO APPEAR.
- Published
- 2022
7. Participatory Video: One Contemporary Way for Cree and Inuit Adolescents to Relate to the Land in Nunavik.
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Herrmann, Thora M., Chanteloup, Laine, and Joliet, Fabienne
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ABORIGINAL Canadians , *INDIGENOUS youth , *CREE (North American people) , *YOUNG adults , *HUMAN geography - Abstract
Indigenous peoples in Canada’s North, especially youth, are increasingly using creative visual arts, such as film, video, and new media technologies to portray their own realities and their personal view of the surrounding environment, thereby contesting colonial, stereotyped media representations of First Peoples. To analyze the youth geography—a sub-discipline of human geography—of nuna (“land” in Inuktitut) and istchee (“land” in Cree) and to understand the distinctive and contemporary meanings that Inuit and Cree young people give to the land, we carried out participatory video (PV) workshops in three Inuit and one Cree communities in Nunavik in 2016, 2017, and 2019. In this paper, we give an account of the nuna/istchee PV project as a method for engaging with young Indigenous people, as a means to develop an Indigenous youth cultural geography in the Arctic. We discuss the effects of PV on the different actors involved in the research process: young Inuit and Cree participants and their communities, the participating schools, and researchers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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8. Local Capacity for Energy Transition in Northern and Indigenous Communities: Analysis of Gwich’in Communities in Northwest Territories, Canada.
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McMaster, Rhys, Noble, Bram, Poelzer, Greg, and Menghwani, Vikas
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RENEWABLE energy transition (Government policy) , *INDIGENOUS children , *RENEWABLE energy sources , *CAPACITY building , *FOSSIL fuels , *SOCIAL processes - Abstract
Introducing local renewable energy solutions into the fossil fuel – dominated energy mix of many northern and off-grid Indigenous communities has the potential to create new socio-economic opportunities and address historical energy injustices. However, energy systems are comprised not only of technology and infrastructure, but also the communities who generate, use, and benefit from energy. The design of community-appropriate local energy systems must thus be based on an understanding of, first, a community’s socio-technical capacity; second, the social processes that stimulate and sustain transition; and third, the longer-term, desired outcomes from local energy. This paper explores the socio-technical capacity for renewable energy transitions in northern and Indigenous communities based on a case study of four Gwich’in communities in the Northwest Territories, Canada. Results show that the foundational attributes of socio-technical capacity for energy transition in northern communities are interconnected, and strengths or challenges in one area often reflect strengths or challenges in another. Several positive community features, or “capacity strengths,” already exist to support energy transition. These include community energy values, which include a community vision; embedded and transferable community skillsets; and “next generation” leaders. In turn, capacity building is needed to provide supports for local energy champions and inter-local energy networks. Results also demonstrate that recent scholarly literature regarding local capacity for community energy does not tightly align with, or reflect the nuances of, energy transition needs in northern and Indigenous communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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9. What Gets Measured Gets Done: Challenges in Monitoring Water, Energy, and Food Security in Northern Canada.
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Bogdan, Ana-Maria, Shah, Tayyab, Sidloski, Michaela, Xiaojing Lu, Meng Li, Ingram, Shawn, and Natcher, David
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FOOD security , *WATER supply , *WATER security , *CALORIC content of foods , *SUSTAINABLE development , *ACQUISITION of data - Abstract
This paper describes the challenges that were encountered during the collection of Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) indicators for water (SDG 6), energy (SDG 7), and food (SDG 2) security in northern Canada. Our findings indicate only 49% of indicator data were publicly available, while 21% had to be calculated using alternative sources or methods, 18% had to be replaced with proxy indicators for which data were available, and 12% of indicators were deemed unavailable entirely. The most common types of data challenges were associated with completeness, timeliness, and granularity. Given the current challenges faced by residents of northern Canada, with their livelihoods closely intertwined with the accessibility and availability of water, energy and food (WEF) resources, a comprehensive plan for data collection, storage, and management of WEF-related SDGs is required to advance WEF security from an aspirational to a transformative policy agenda. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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10. Community Perspectives on Inuit Country Food Insecurity in Gjoa Haven, Nunavut.
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Desautels, Jamie, Chapman, Jacqueline, and Schott, Stephan
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FOOD security , *INUIT , *FOOD sovereignty , *FOCUS groups , *OLDER people - Abstract
This paper explores how policies and programs can better support country food security and food sovereignty in Gjoa Haven, Nunavut. Through a series of six focus groups with a total of 74 participants, we explore the challenges that Elders, youth, hunters, food preparers, and program providers face in the access, availability, quality, and use of country food. Despite the diverse representation among focus groups, participants revealed similar challenges across demographics and highlighted how tailored policies and programs can provide complementary solutions that serve more than one purpose. We argue that policies and programs targeting financial and economic challenges; resources and infrastructure; and skills and knowledge will improve country food security and will promote food sovereignty. Ultimately, policies and programs must be community informed and tailored to their current context and community dynamics. However, the recommendations we provide could be adapted to other Arctic communities experiencing similar challenges. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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11. Ice in Motion: Panoramic Perspectives and Moving Pictures.
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Gapp, Isabelle
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POLAR exploration , *GEOGRAPHICAL discoveries , *VIRTUAL tourism , *SCIENTIFIC discoveries , *VIRTUAL reality , *SEA ice , *GLACIERS - Abstract
The Arctic panorama has often been framed by conversations of the Victorian imperial imaginary and was originally conceived to showcase anglophone exploration, heroism, and scientific discovery. This paper explores the complementary and multifaceted visual representations of Arctic glacial ice, from the Victorian spectacle of the panorama to contemporary virtual reality technology. I look at how glaciers have been depicted, documented, and presented within panoramic media over the past two centuries. I explore how ice moves through both time and space, confronting climate histories within physical and spatiotemporal ideas of movement. Alongside the materiality of ice, I consider the modes of observation involved in creating and viewing these panoramic pictures. In making Arctic exploratory history tangible and visual, I do not seek to simply revive a sublime imaginary and document ice loss but look to the panorama as a method of engaging polar exploration and scientific discovery in the study of visual culture. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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12. Subarctic Corridors in Northern Quebec: Is the Canadian Northern Corridor Concept Aligned with Quebec's Historical Development?
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Stringer, Thomas and Joanis, Marcelin
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PROVINCES , *FEDERAL government - Abstract
Proposals for infrastructure development in Canada's North are gaining political traction, including a corridor connecting the northern regions of each of the country's provinces. Quebec is Canada's largest, northernmost province and would be pivotal in the construction of the corridor. Examining the historical phases of Quebec's northern development is crucial in assessing the challenges ahead. This paper groups Quebec's infrastructure developments into three main phases, synthesizes each phase, and critically compares them to the proposed Northern Corridor concept (NCC). No research has yet examined the NCC's complementarity with Quebec's history of northern infrastructure development. While previous phases could be categorized as intraprovincial penetration corridors linking northern to southern Quebec, the NCC aims to develop an interprovincial economic corridor for landlocked provinces to be able to gain better sea access. Obstacles arising from the conciliation of past developments with the NCC include the unfitness of using existing infrastructures in Quebec for a Pan-Canadian corridor and differing development trajectories at the provincial and federal levels. Three route options for the NCC in Quebec are presented in this study. More generally, this paper outlines difficulties specific to subarctic remote corridor development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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13. Observations of Ringed Seal (Phoca hispida) in the Nearshore Waters of the Chukotka Peninsula.
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Melnikov, Vladimir V.
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RINGED seal , *MARINE mammals , *PENINSULAS , *TERRITORIAL waters , *COASTS , *FISHERIES - Abstract
Despite the importance of ringed seals in the regional economy of the Chukotka Autonomous District, with the end of the commercial fishery, research on the ringed seal in Russia has almost completely ceased. The coastal zone of the Chukotka Peninsula, where the Native people hunt for seals, has seen very little research. This paper is devoted to the study of the modern distribution and habitat of the ringed seal (Phoca hispida) in the coastal waters of Chukotka. Observations of ringed seals were carried out simultaneously with observations of other species of marine mammals from posts located on the coast of the Chukotka Peninsula in 1993 -- 96, 1998 -- 2000, 2002 -- 05, and 2010 -- 11. Field studies provided information on the spatial and seasonal distribution, movements, and relative abundance of the ringed seal in the coastal zone. In winter, seals were found on the drifting ice in the southern coastal area of the northern part of the Gulf of Anadyr, and on fast ice and its edge in the bays of the eastern part of the Chukotka Peninsula. In spring, the main aggregations of ringed seals were observed on fast ice in Senyavin Strait, Lavrentiya Bay, and Tkachen Bay. The migration of immature seals to the Chukchi Sea was noted. In summer, animals were distributed in the coastal zone of the entire Chukotka Peninsula, but their relative number decreased by 85%. In late autumn, the main aggregations of seals were observed on the young ice of Lavrentiya Bay, in Senyavin Strait, and in Tkachen Bay. The landfast ice of the eastern coastal zone of Chukotka Peninsula is one of the main areas for the reproduction of ringed seals in the Bering Sea. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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14. "These Trees Have Stories to Tell": Linking Dëneso'łıné Oral History of Caribou Use with Trample Scar Frequency on Black Spruce Roots at Ɂedacho Kué.
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Dokis-Jansen, Kelsey L., Parlee, Brenda L., First Nation, Łutsël K'e Dëne, Hik, David S., Gendreau-Berthiaume, Benoit, Macdonald, Ellen, and Stinn, Christina
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CARIBOU , *BLACK spruce , *REINDEER , *ORAL history , *STORYTELLING , *HABITATS - Abstract
For thousands of years Ɂedacho Kué (Artillery Lake, Northwest Territories) has been a key water crossing site for barren-ground caribou (Rangifer tarandus groenlandicus). Human disturbance of barren-ground caribou habitat in northern Canada has emerged as an important focus of study in the last decade; particularly in the Bathurst range of the Northwest Territories where caribou populations have declined by more than 95% since the 1980s. Guided by local Indigenous leaders and Elders, a collaborative research project was developed with the Dëneso'łıné people of Łutsël K'e Dëne First Nation (2012 - 14). This paper describes linkages between knowledge derived from Dëneso'łıné oral history and quantitative dendroecological analysis of trample scars on black spruce (Picea mariana) root samples collected at Ɂedacho Kué to provide a better understanding of caribou use at this location. Findings from oral histories and dendroecology analysis were consistent with one another and with previous dendroecology study in the region, although some discrepancies were detected in data from 1995 - 2006 that require further study to elucidate. Key findings include relatively low caribou use at Ɂedacho Kué during the 1930s and late 1960s, with use increasing into the 1970s and peaking in the late 1980s, as well as Elder and hunter reports of no caribou in some years between 2005 and 2012. This work addresses a gap in scientific data about barren-ground caribou movements at Ɂedacho Kué prior to satellite collar use in 1996 and corroborates previously documented oral histories about the enduring value of Ɂedacho Kué as critical habitat to barren-ground caribou. Given the drastic decline of the Bathurst caribou over the last two decades, more research is needed to understand movements and their relationship to population dynamics. In this context, the research approach described in this paper could be used as an example of how to meaningfully bring together place-based Indigenous knowledge and science in addressing an urgent issue of Arctic sustainability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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15. Trends in Subsistence Research in Northern Canada: A Systematic Literature Review.
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Natcher, David C., Bogdan, Ana Maria, and Southcott, Chris
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WILDLIFE management , *CRITICAL thinking , *GOVERNMENT policy , *CLIMATE change - Abstract
In this paper we present the results from a systematic literature review of subsistence research that was conducted in northern Canada between 1950 and 2019. Our analysis identified trends in subsistence research, including the breadth of research topics, influential scholars and scholarship, and the emergence of research networks. Our results identified 245 publications authored by a multidisciplinary network of 365 scholars. Research conducted through ArcticNet and the International Polar Year is responsible for 75% (n = 183 of 245) of all subsistence-related publications during this period. Subsistence publications cover a wide range of topics, including climate change, nutrition, and wildlife management, but Indigenous food culture and the roles of women in subsistence have received comparatively less scholarly attention. Given the profound changes occurring in northern Canada, whether a result of anthropogenic or non-anthropogenic disturbances, greater attention to the cultural and gendered dimensions of subsistence will be particularly valuable to northern scholarship and the public policies it can inform. This attention will be increasingly necessary in a time when critical thinking about the future of subsistence in northern Canada is of critical need. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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16. Behaviors of High Arctic Wolves in Response to Humans.
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Marquard-Petersen, Ulf
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WOLVES , *DOGS , *WOLF conservation , *CANIDAE , *SEA ice , *HUMAN beings - Abstract
This paper reports results of the first range-wide study of the behaviors of free-living wolves in the High Arctic in response to human presence and discusses these behaviors from a conservation perspective. The study focused on wolves believed to have had little, if any, contact with humans and excluded data from areas where wolves have become habituated to people. Data consisted of incidental sightings of wolves on the Canadian Arctic Archipelago and in Greenland from 1819 to 2019. A total of 325 behavioral observations were identified: 163 from Greenland and 162 from Canada. The most commonly reported behaviors (71.4%) involved wolves seeking out humans: coming to campsites, following traveling dog teams, closely approaching a person, and following people. These behaviors are not typical of canids in lower latitudes and have the potential to create conflicts with people who might feel threatened owing to the centuries-old belief that wolves are dangerous. Some Arctic wolves have been shot in perceived self-defense, when in all likelihood the animals were only curious. In addition, aggression directed towards domestic dogs was the most common form of wolf-dog interaction and produced another source of conflict. The findings are important from a conservation perspective because of the small wolf population and the fact that vanishing sea ice is increasing human access to the Arctic wolf range. Appropriate and humanely used hazing techniques and outreach to stakeholders on what constitutes normal Arctic wolf behavior can mitigate the risk of conflict and contribute to the conservation of Arctic wolves on the Canadian Arctic Archipelago and in Greenland, while minimizing the risk that the natural behavior of this subspecies is altered by increased human activity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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17. PAPERS TO APPEAR IN ARCTIC.
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HOLOCENE paleoclimatology , *SCIENTIFIC method - Abstract
The article lists the research papers that appeared in"ARCTIC" issue including "Holocene Evolution of Lakes in the Bluefish Basin, Northern Yukon, Canada," "Sources of Breeding Mortality in Canadian Arctic Seabirds" and "A Century of Climate Change for Fairbanks, Alaska."
- Published
- 2009
18. PAPERS TO APPEAR IN ARCTIC.
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PERIODICALS ,ARCTIC research - Abstract
Lists research papers on the Arctic region received by the editors of the periodical 'Arctic,' as of March 2002. 'Photographic Key for the Microhistological Identification of Some Arctic Vascular Plants,' by S. Carriere; 'Multi-Island Home Range Use by Two Peary Caribou, Canadian High Arctic Islands, Nunavut, 1993-94,' by F.L. Miller.
- Published
- 2002
19. Food Storage in Permafrost and Seasonally Frozen Ground in Chukotka and Alaska Communities.
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Yoshikawa, Kenji, Maslakov, Alexey A., Kraev, Gleb, Ikuta, Hiroko, Romanovsky, Vladimir E., Craig George, J., Klene, Anna E., and Nyland, Kelsey E.
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FOOD storage , *PERMAFROST , *FROZEN ground , *FERMENTED foods ,COLD regions - Abstract
Food cellars, otherwise referred to as ice or meat cellars, (lednik in Russian, k'aetyran in Chukchi, sigluaq in Iñupiaq, and siqlugaq in Yupik) are a natural form of refrigeration in permafrost or seasonally frozen ground used to preserve, age, and ferment foods harvested for subsistence, including marine mammals, birds, fish, and plants. Indigenous peoples throughout the Arctic have constructed cellars in frozen ground for millennia. This paper focuses on cellars in Russian and American coastal and island communities of the Bering Strait, the region otherwise known as Beringia. This area has a unique, culturally rich, and politically dynamic history. Many traditions associated with cellars are threatened in Chukchi communities in Russia because of the impacts of climate change, relocation, dietary changes, and industrial development. However, even with warmer temperatures, cellars still provide a means to age and ferment food stuffs following traditional methods. In cooperation with local stakeholders, we measured internal temperatures of 18 cellars in 13 communities throughout the Bering Strait region and northern Alaska. Though cellars are widely used in permafrost regions, their structure, usage, and maintenance methods differ and exhibit influences of local climates, traditions, and economic activities. Monitoring internal temperatures and recording structural descriptions of cellars is important in the face of climate change to better understand the variety and resilience of living adaptations in different cold regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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20. PAPERS TO APPEAR IN ARCTIC.
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PUBLICATIONS , *PERIODICALS - Abstract
The article presents a list of publications received to appear in the journal including "The Influence of Whaler William Scoresby, Jr. on the Arctic Observations of Sir James Lamont," by C.L. Devlin and "Environmental Assessment in the Arctic: A Gap Analysis and Research Agenda."
- Published
- 2015
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21. Water Vulnerability in Arctic Households: A Literature-based Analysis.
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Sohns, Antonia, Ford, James D., Riva, Mylene, Robinson, Brian, and Adamowski, Jan
- Subjects
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HOUSEHOLDS , *WATER supply , *WATER , *META-analysis , *CLIMATE change - Abstract
There is an urgent need to understand the contextual factors that influence water vulnerability of households in the Arctic. To evaluate the existing knowledge of Arctic household water vulnerability, this paper presents the results of a narrative review with a systematic search. The review identified 112 documents, including peer-reviewed articles, reviews, book chapters, proceedings papers, and meeting abstracts. The documents were analyzed for the main factors affecting water vulnerability in Arctic households, which fell into two categories: biophysical factors and anthropogenic factors. Within the biophysical category, the majority of documents noted climate change impacts on freshwater supplies and water systems, followed by attention to extreme weather and the seasonality of water supplies. Within the anthropogenic category, the vast majority highlighted infrastructure as the primary issue affecting water access, followed by economic, governance, socio-cultural, and demographic factors. Through these diverse influencing factors, this review situates the discussion of household water vulnerability in the Arctic in a more nuanced light. The categories illuminate patterns between factors, which can worsen, assuage, or mitigate water vulnerability. The complex relationships between these factors influence the degree and nature of water vulnerability in Arctic households. In order to successfully address household water vulnerability in the Arctic, these factors and their dynamic relationships must be considered in freshwater policy and management frameworks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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22. Social Licence Comes to Greenland's Mining Sector: Will Communities be Empowered?
- Author
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Bowles, Paul and MacPhail, Fiona
- Subjects
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NONPROFIT sector , *MINING methodology , *MINES & mineral resources , *NATURAL resources , *COMMUNITIES , *SELF-efficacy - Abstract
The social licence to operate is a concept that has been applied to the mining sector internationally for the past two decades. In 2017, it was raised by a number of actors as a way to reduce controversy over mining projects in Greenland. In this paper, we analyse why the concept of social licence appeared, and the legitimacy problems that it was intended to resolve despite numerous changes to Greenland's mining approval processes. We argue that the concept was introduced primarily as a way of seeking to enhance the voices and agency of local communities in resource governance. We further ask whether, on the basis of Canadian experience where social licence has been used for much longer in natural resource governance discourse, introducing the concept into Greenland will likely lead to an empowerment of communities. We argue that the Canadian experience in this regard shows that the outcome is complex, that community empowerment can take different forms or may not occur at all. Such complexity is also likely in Greenland. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. "When We're on the Ice, All We Have is Our Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit": Mobilizing Inuit Knowledge as a Sea Ice Safety Adaptation Strategy in Mittimatalik, Nunavut.
- Author
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Wilson, Katherine J., Arreak, Andrew, Itulu, Jamesie, Ljubicic, Gita J., and Bell, Trevor
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INUIT , *INDIGENOUS youth , *OCEAN travel , *SITUATIONAL awareness , *COLONIAL administration , *WEATHER forecasting , *SEA ice , *PHYSIOLOGICAL adaptation - Abstract
Increased variability in weather and sea ice conditions due to climate change has led to high rates of injury, trauma, and death for Inuit travelling on the sea ice. Contributing to these high rates are the ongoing effects of colonial policies that diminish and disrupt the intergenerational transfer of sea ice Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit (IQ). Despite these challenges, place-based experiential IQ continues to be the most important information source for safe travel on the sea ice. This paper presents an Inuit-led, coproduced, cross-cultural research project in which Inuit youth documented and mobilized sea ice IQ in Mittimatalik (Pond Inlet), Nunavut for safe community sea ice travel. We outline the Inuit youth training to facilitate the terminology and participatory mapping workshops and to document this IQ. We also discuss the IQ that was most important to share, and the mapping and artistic methods used to mobilize this IQ into a booklet, maps, and posters. Inuktitut sea ice terms are the foundation to enable youth with the skills to learn about sea ice IQ with experienced hunters. IQ enables Inuit to interpret and synthesize information from weather forecasts, earth observations, and community-based monitoring to apply to local conditions. Seasonal IQ maps of safe and hazardous sea ice conditions provide travel planning information at spatial and temporal scales that supplemental information sources cannot address. The IQ products mobilize preparedness, situational awareness, navigation, and interpretation skills so Inuit youth can become more self-reliant, as access to technology is not always possible once out on the sea ice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. PAPERS TO APPEAR IN ARCTIC.
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PERIODICAL articles - Abstract
The article presents the papers that will appear in the journal "Arctic," including "Nearshore Fish Assemblages of the Northeastern Chukchi Sea, Alaska," by J. F. Thedinga and colleagues, "Dolphin and Union Caribou Herd Status and Trend," by M. Dumond and D. S. Lee, and "Range Constraints for Introduced Elk in Southwest Yukon, Canada," by W. L. Strong, J. H. S. Chambers, and T. S. Jung.
- Published
- 2013
25. PAPERS TO APPEAR IN ARCTIC.
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LISTS , *PERIODICAL publishing - Abstract
The article presents a list of research papers that will appear in the upcoming issues of the journal, including "Predation of Broad Whitefish (Coregonus nasus) in the Mackenzie Delta Region, Northwest Territories," by O.E. Barker, "After Whom is Herschel Island Named?," by C.R. Burn, and "Century of Climate Change for Fairbanks, Alaska," by G. Wendler and M. Shulski.
- Published
- 2009
26. PAPERS TO APPEAR IN ARCTIC.
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PERIODICALS , *PUBLISHED articles - Abstract
The article lists papers to be published in the next issue of "ARCTIC" journal including "The Annual Migration Cycle of Emperor Geese in Western Alaska," "Bone Weathering in a Periglacial Environment: The Tayara Site" and "Talent in the Cold? Creative Capital and the Economic Future of the Canadian North."
- Published
- 2007
27. PAPERS TO APPEAR IN ARCTIC.
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PERIODICALS ,ARCTIC research - Abstract
Lists research papers on the Arctic region, received by the editors of the periodical 'Arctic,' as of September 2002. 'Search for Barents: Evaluation of Possible Burial Sites on North Novaya Zemlya, Russia,' by J. Zeeberg, P.M. Floore, G.J.R. Maat and J.H. Gawronski.
- Published
- 2002
28. PAPERS TO APPEAR IN ARCTIC.
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PERIODICALS ,ARCTIC research - Abstract
Lists research papers slated to appear in the journal 'Arctic.' 'Satellite Tracking of Eastern Chukchi Sea Beluga Whales into the Arctic Ocean,' by R.S. Suydam, L.F. Lowry, K.J. Frost, G.M. O'Corry-Crowe and D. Pikok Jr.; 'Summer and Autumn Movements of Belugas of the Eastern Beaufort Sea Stock' by P.R. Richard, A.R. Martin and T.G. Smith.
- Published
- 2001
29. PAPERS TO APPEAR IN ARCTIC.
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- *
PERIODICALS ,ARCTIC research - Abstract
Lists research papers which are slated to appear in the journal 'Arctic.' 'Control of Biological Exposure to UV Radiation in the Arctic Ocean: Comparison of the Roles of Ozone and Riverine Dissolved Organic Matter,' by J.A.E. Gibson, W.F. Vincent, B. Nieke and R. Pienitz; 'Variability of Arctic Sea Ice: The View from Space, an 18-year Record,' by J. Morison, K. Aagard and M. Steele.
- Published
- 2000
30. Responding to COVID-19: Contextual, Pedagogical, and Experiential Considerations from Canadian Northern Postsecondary Educators.
- Author
-
Durnford, Kerry Lynn, Lemky, Kim, Moffitt, Pertice, Oyugi, Perez, and Pender, Kathie
- Subjects
- *
COVID-19 , *COVID-19 pandemic , *EDUCATORS , *CRITICAL thinking , *CAREER development , *PANDEMICS - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic forced the closure of face-to-face classes in a northern Canadian college in March 2020. Educators and staff went into rapid response mode to continue teaching and supporting students from a distance. Critical reflections were written by the authors to summarize their responses to teaching and learning during the early phases of the pandemic. These reflections were themed, considered individually and collectively, then analyzed and synthesized. In this paper, critical reflection is used as an educational process within the context of critical constructivism and transformative paradigms. We share how teaching during the pandemic solidified our commitment to students and cemented our critical pedagogy by thinking and acting critically to assist students with this disruption in their education. Equipped with these capabilities, educators are empowered to work with students to problem solve and transform our educative lives for a just society. An inter-professional opportunity across programs, spurred by the pandemic, meets organizational strategic directions and fosters a promising relationality. Increased territorial and local technological supports and internal professional development is needed to solidify the immense prospects for distance education as the College transitions to a polytechnic university. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. PAPERS TO APPEAR IN ARCTIC.
- Subjects
- *
BROMIDES , *METRIBUZIN , *CROP management , *FOREST fires , *CLIMATE change , *TAIGAS - Abstract
Presents the articles which will appear in the journal, "Arctic." "Allocating Harvests Among Polar Bear Stocks in the Beaufort Sea," by S. C. Amstrup, G. M. Durner, I. Stirling and T. L. McDonald; "Dissipation of Bromide and Metribuzin Affected by Tillage and Crop Residue Management in Subarctic Alaska," by B. S. Sharratt and C. W. Knight; "Potential Alteration by Climate Change of the Forest-Fire Regime in the Boreal Forest of Central Yukon Territory," by V. M. McCoy and C. R. Burn.
- Published
- 2005
32. A Nexus Approach to Water, Energy, and Food Security in Northern Canada.
- Author
-
Natcher, David and Ingram, Shawn
- Subjects
- *
FOOD security , *SUSTAINABLE development - Abstract
Residents of northern Canada experience high rates of water, energy, and food (WEF) insecurity relative to the national average. Historically, WEF systems have been treated independently with little policy or institutional coordination occurring between sectors. This paper presents the results of a WEF nexus analysis for northern Canada. We assess the positive and negative interactions between the WEF sectors that could facilitate or impede the attainment of WEF-related sustainable development goals. Out of 210 pair-wise interactions, 87% were found to be synergistic of some magnitude, meaning that efforts to address insecurity in one WEF sector will have positive spillover effects toward the others. With synergies significantly outweighing trade-offs, opportunities exist to simultaneously address WEF insecurities through mutually beneficial actions that capitalize on and promote synergetic policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. PAPERS TO APPEAR IN ARCTIC.
- Subjects
- *
PERIODICALS ,ARCTIC research - Abstract
Lists research articles on the Arctic region received by the editors of the periodical 'Arctic,' as of June 2002. 'Photographic Key for the Microhistological Identification of Some Arctic Vascular Plants,' by S. Carriere; 'Aberrant Radiocarbon Dates on an Inuit Arrowhead,' by D.E. Nelson and R. McGhee.
- Published
- 2002
34. Akimiski Island, Nunavut, Canada: The Use of Cree Oral History and Sea-Level Retrodiction to Resolve Aboriginal Title.
- Author
-
Tsuji, Leonard J. S., General, Zachariah, Tsuji, Stephen R. J., Powell, Evelyn, Latychev, Konstantin, Clark, Jorie, and Mitrovica, Jerry X.
- Subjects
- *
ORAL history , *ISLANDS , *GLACIAL isostasy , *TRADITIONAL knowledge , *INUIT - Abstract
On 1 April 1999, Akimiski Island of the western James Bay region of northern Ontario, Canada, was included in the newly formed territory of Nunavut, Canada--an Inuit-dominated territory--even though the Inuit had never asserted Aboriginal title to the island. By contrast, the Omushkegowuk Cree of the western James Bay region have asserted Aboriginal title to Akimiski Island. The Government of Canada by their action (or inaction) has reversed the onus of responsibility for proof of Aboriginal title from the Inuit to the Cree. In other words, the Government of Canada did not follow their own guidelines and the common-law test for proof of Aboriginal title. In this paper, we documented and employed Cree oral history as well as a sea-level retrodiction (based on state-of-the-art numerical modeling of past sea-level changes in James Bay), which incorporated a modified ICE-6G ice history and a 3-D model of Earth structure, to establish that criterion 2 of the test for Aboriginal title has now been fully met. In other words, Cree traditional use and occupancy of Akimiski Island was considered sufficiently factual at the time of assertion of sovereignty by European nations. As all the criteria of the common-law test for proof of Aboriginal title in Canada, with respect to Akimiski Island, have now been addressed, the Cree have sufficient basis to initiate the process of a formal land claim. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. PAPER TO APPEAR.
- Published
- 2022
36. Strengthening Sustainable Northern Food Systems: Federal Policy Constraints and Potential Opportunities.
- Author
-
Wilson, Amanda, Levkoe, Charles Z., Andrée, Peter, Skinner, Kelly, Spring, Andrew, Wesche, Sonia, and Galloway, Tracey
- Subjects
- *
FEDERAL government , *FOOD security , *LOCAL foods , *FIRST Nations of Canada , *FOOD production - Abstract
This paper explores how Canadian federal policy and frameworks can better support community-based initiatives to reduce food insecurity and build sustainable food systems in the North. Through an examination of the current state of food systems infrastructure, transportation, harvest, and production in the Yukon, Northwest Territories, Nunavut, Nunavik, and Nunatsiavut, we argue in favour of a multi-sector approach that supports diversified food systems, including traditional/country food production and distribution, in a way that values and prioritizes community-led initiatives and Indigenous peoples' self-determination and self-governance. The challenge of developing sustainable, northern food systems requires made-in-the-North solutions that are attuned to cultural, geographic, environmental, and political contexts. Recent policy developments suggest some progress in this direction, however much more work is needed. Ultimately, sustainable northern food systems must be defined by and for Northerners at community, local, and regional levels, with particular attention paid to treaty rights and the right to self-determination of First Nations and other Indigenous communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Knowledge Mobilization in Community-based Arctic Research.
- Author
-
Flynn, Melanie and Ford, James D.
- Subjects
- *
COMMUNITY-based participatory research , *GREY literature , *SEMI-structured interviews , *COMMUNITIES - Abstract
Knowledge mobilization (KMb) is widely recognized as being essential to research, but there is limited academic guidance on how to do this well. This paper builds on the growing body of literature to develop a framework of key principles for KMb focused on Indigenous communities in the North American Arctic. We used a literature search and coding of identified good practice from both the grey and peer-reviewed literature (n = 80), alongside semi-structured interviews (n = 24) with key stakeholders to determine a framework of key principles and to contextualize and identify gaps or challenges. We found that effective KMb occurs throughout the research process and varies widely across regions and by researcher and community. Ultimately, there is no checklist of specific actions to ensure effective KMb, nor would such a list be desirable given the need to tailor KMb to specific contexts. However, we have identified three key principles of effective KMb: 1) respect, 2) mutual understanding, and 3) researcher responsibility. Underlying these principles is the consideration of trust and relationship building. Though these notions are based on subtle and nuanced context and vary from place to place, they all involve the consideration of formal and informal processes of KMb with Arctic research. By highlighting these key principles, we provide a framework to increase effectiveness of KMb across environmental change research within Arctic communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Analysis of Impact Assessment Practice and Mitigation for Shipping Activity in the Eastern Canadian Arctic.
- Author
-
Thiessen, Bethany, Noble, Bram, and Hanna, Kevin
- Subjects
- *
SEA ice , *NATURAL resources , *TOURISM , *BARGES - Abstract
Marine traffic is increasing in the Canadian Arctic, largely because of changing ice conditions, a growing tourism industry, and natural resource extraction. Impact assessment (IA) is a primary instrument for managing the impacts of project development in the Arctic, but there has been limited analysis of the scope and application of IA for identifying and managing the impacts of shipping. This paper examines the impacts of shipping activity associated with mining projects in the eastern Canadian Arctic, including barge traffic and resupply vessels; the mitigation actions commonly prescribed in IA; and the key IA challenges facing decision-makers. Results show 71 impacts that may be considered common to IA applications for shipping, for which the mitigation strategies rely heavily on compliance-based measures and “best” practices to either minimize or avoid impacts, supported by follow-up programs that provide for adaptation of mitigation based on monitoring results. However, results also illustrate concerns over the ability of IA to effectively manage the cumulative effects of increasing Arctic marine traffic. Only a minority of projects involving marine transport trigger IA, even though other types of marine traffic, such as tourism, may generate similar types of impacts. The common impacts and mitigation solutions identified in this research and the lessons from monitoring can inform future IAs for shipping, improve permitting processes for shipping activities that do not require IA, and provide a foundation for a more regional or sector-wide approach to identifying and mitigating the cumulative effects of increasing vessel traffic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Observations of Annual Walrus (Odobenus rosmarus divergens) Migrations in the Nearshore Waters of the Chukotka Peninsula from 1990 to 2012.
- Author
-
Melnikov, Vladimir V.
- Subjects
- *
WALRUS , *MARINE mammals , *PENINSULAS , *WATER , *STRAITS - Abstract
After the end of the commercial harvest, research regarding the Pacific walrus (Odobenus rosmarus divergens) in Russia was reduced and focused on the observation of animals at land-based haul-outs. This paper presents the long-term observations of the distribution, relative abundance, and direction of seasonal movements of walruses in the offshore waters of the Chukotka Peninsula, based on data obtained in 1990 - 2012. Observations of Pacific walruses and other marine mammals were conducted mainly from April through November, but some were conducted all year round. In some years up to 30 Native Chukotkan observers were employed at this task. Some watched from observation posts in Native villages onshore, and others from motorboats during hunting trips. These observations have shown that walruses are rare in January and February in the nearshore waters of the Chukotka Peninsula. Their numbers begin to increase in March. The northward movement of walruses begins in April, and walruses migrate from the Bering Sea to the Chukchi Sea throughout the summer months and early autumn. Based on observations from posts located directly in front of the southern Bering Strait, I conclude that 106 - 1055 walruses pass through the Bering Strait from July to September, to the northwest and north. At the haul-outs in the Gulf of Anadyr, the relative number of walruses remains stable during the summer (up to 11 000 individuals at all haul-outs in total based on observers' estimates) and decreases only with the appearance of ice in October - November. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. The "Cast Iron Site"--A Tale of Four Stoves from the 1845 Franklin Northwest Passage Expedition.
- Author
-
Stenton, Douglas R. and Park, Robert W.
- Subjects
- *
CAST-iron , *STOVES , *INUIT , *WOOD stoves , *INVESTIGATIONS ,NORTHWEST Passage - Abstract
Few detailed analyses exist for the majority of the sites that comprise the archaeological record of the 1845 Franklin Northwest Passage expedition. This paper presents the results of new investigations of an Inuit site (NgLj-9) at Erebus Bay on King William Island, Nunavut, containing materials derived from the 1845 Franklin expedition. The complex history of the origin and use of artifacts found at the site and its relationship to other Franklin sites and events associated with the expedition are revealed through the analysis and integration of archaeological, historical, and oral historical data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Seabird Breeding Colonies in East and North Greenland: A Baseline.
- Author
-
Boertmann, David, Merkel, Flemming, and Gilg, Olivier
- Subjects
- *
SEA birds , *SEA ice , *CLIMATE change , *CORMORANTS , *GULLS , *BREEDING - Abstract
This paper presents the results of a number of aircraft- and boat-based surveys for seabird breeding colonies in East and North Greenland carried out in the period 2003 to 2018 and gives the first comprehensive overview of the distribution and size of the seabird breeding colonies in this remote and mainly uninhabited region. Seventeen seabird species breed in approximately 800 sites distributed very unevenly along the coasts, with high concentrations at the polynyas and long stretches with very few breeding seabirds. Climate changes are in full progress in East and North Greenland, especially affecting the sea ice regime, and seabirds are expected to respond to these changes in different ways. For example, since the 1980s, Common Eiders (Somateria mollissima) have extended their breeding range more than two latitudinal degrees towards the north, now reaching the northernmost land on Earth. Lesser Black-backed Gulls (Larus fuscus) and Great Cormorants (Phalacrocorax carbo) have immigrated, and Sabine's Gulls (Xema sabini) have increased and extended their range. Besides presenting survey results, this report may also serve as a baseline for future studies of the abundance of breeding seabirds in East and North Greenland. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Co-management of Traditional Foods: Opportunities and Limitations for Food Security in Northern First Nation Communities.
- Author
-
Cruickshank, Ainslie, Notten, Geranda, Wesche, Sonia, Ballegooyen, Kate, and Pope, Geraldine
- Subjects
- *
FIRST Nations of Canada , *FOOD security , *SEMI-structured interviews , *COMMUNITIES , *FOOD - Abstract
Traditional foods that First Nations peoples harvest or gather from the land remain critically important for achieving and sustaining food security for many communities. In Canada's North, land claim agreements include provisions for First Nations to participate in the governance of their traditional territories, including the co-management of important traditional (wild-harvested) food species. Because such agreements only specify the broad contours of co-management governance, their actual functioning evolves out of a complex interplay among the co-managing organizations over the course of time. This paper aims to deepen our understanding of how First Nations communities can enhance food security as participants in co-management. Our study connects research on food security with research on co-management and is the first to analyze how First Nations can improve their food security by influencing decision-making that affects traditional foods through co-management arrangements. Following a succinct review of the Indigenous food security and co-management literatures, we analyze the experiences of Kluane First Nation in enhancing community food security through the co-management of its traditional territory with Yukon Government and Parks Canada, interpreting the data in light of the theories and evidences offered by research on co-management. The analysis of data collected from semi-structured interviews and from First Nations and government resources shows that, while the co-management system is imperfect, it does offer a mechanism through which First Nations can exert influence on decisions that affect their food security. The three key themes emerging from the excerpts confirm the importance of co-management as an evolutionary and long-term process, in which trust- and relationship-building are ongoing activities that are fundamental to beneficial collaboration involving the sharing of information and power. The analysis also highlights the role of context, or situational factors, in facilitating or hindering collaboration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Lessons Learned through Research Partnership and Capacity Enhancement in Inuit Nunangat.
- Author
-
Carter, Natalie Ann, Dawson, Jackie, Simonee, Natasha, Tagalik, Shirley, and Ljubicic, Gita
- Subjects
- *
INUIT , *COMMUNITY organization , *SEA ice , *SCIENTIFIC community , *FRIENDSHIP , *CANADIAN Inuit , *ADOLESCENT friendships - Abstract
Facilitating research and enhancing community research capacity through a partnered approach in Inuit Nunangat (the Inuit homeland of Canada, located in Arctic Canada) presents learning opportunities and challenges for southern-based, non-Inuit researchers and community members alike. This article outlines lessons learned through the Arctic Corridors and Northern Voices (AC-NV) project, which involved 14 communities across Inuit Nunangat. The AC-NV focused on understanding community-identified impacts and potential management options of increased shipping in Inuit Nunangat due to sea ice reductions and a changing climate. The approach used to conduct the research involved visiting researchers and community partners working together with local organizations, and training and hiring northern youth as cultural liaisons and workshop co-facilitators. We strove to develop a model of collaborative partnership and strong north-south research relationships. In this paper, we draw on our broad learning experiences from four community case studies conducted as part of the AC-NV project: Arviat, Cambridge Bay, Gjoa Haven, and Pond Inlet, Nunavut. Close partnerships were formed in each of these communities, and 32 youth were trained in participatory mapping and workshop facilitation. For our diverse team of Inuit, northern- (i.e., non-Inuit, living in Inuit Nunangat), and southern-based non-Inuit researchers, our efforts to engage in partnered research were a critical component of the research and learning experience. In this article we share methodological reflections and lessons learned from what collaborative-partnered research means in practice. In so doing, we aim to contribute to the increasing dialogue and efforts around knowledge co-production and Inuit self-determination in research. Key conclusions of this reflective exercise include the importance of 1) conducting research that is relevant to local needs and interests, 2) visiting researchers and local organizations partnering together, 3) co-creating and refining knowledge documentation tools, 4) including youth cultural liaisons as co-facilitators, 5) conducting results validation and sharing exercises, and 6) being open to forming personal friendships. For the AC-NV, this community-based partnership approach resulted in more robust research results, strengthened north-south relations, and enhanced local capacity for community-led projects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. THE KOCH FAMILY PAPERS. PART 1: NEW INSIGHTS INTO THE LIFE, WORK AND ASPIRATIONS OF GREENLAND GEO-EXPLORER LAUGE KOCH (1892-1964).
- Author
-
Gilotti, Jane A.
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY & biography , *NONFICTION - Abstract
The article reviews the book "The Koch Family Papers. Part 1: New Insights Into the Life, Work and Aspirations of Greenland Geo-Explorer Lauge Koch 1892-1964," by Peter R. Dawes.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. The Impact of Sea Ice on Cruise Tourism on Svalbard.
- Author
-
Bystrowska, Marta
- Subjects
- *
SEA ice , *OCEAN travel , *CRUISE industry , *ARCTIC climate , *TOURISM , *CLIMATE change - Abstract
This paper explores the relationship between sea ice conditions and cruise tourism activities in the Arctic Archipelago of Svalbard. It analyzes how cruise tourism planning and organization depend on sea ice conditions and to what extent Arctic climate change influences tourism. A mixed-method approach, including sea ice analysis and interviews with 13 cruise tourism stakeholders, was applied to grasp the complexity of Svalbard's cruise tourism. The outcomes show that cruise traffic depends on the sea ice cover, but only to some extent. Other factors, such as a location's attractiveness or sailing regulations also influence cruise itineraries around Svalbard. Sea ice conditions are in general considered favorable for cruising around Svalbard, and sea ice is a not a decisive factor in cruise planning and organization. The sea ice cover around Svalbard is decreasing; thus, high annual and inter-annual unpredictability of sea ice poses challenges for cruise operations around Svalbard. Flexibility in itineraries, plus good cooperation and management help the cruise industry adjust to any challenges arising from uncertain sea ice conditions. However, issues of overcrowding and decreased attractiveness due to disappearing ice are more and more visible and may challenge the development of cruise tourism around Svalbard in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Wildlife Management in Nunavik: Structures, Operations, and Perceptions Following the James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement.
- Author
-
Gombay, Nicole
- Subjects
- *
WILDLIFE management , *PROVINCIAL governments , *INUIT , *BAYS , *SENSORY perception , *GOVERNMENT agencies - Abstract
Among the functions of the James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement (JBNQA) was the establishment of a series of mechanisms to enable its Indigenous signatories to continue their subsistence practices. Central to these mechanisms were commitments to create a co-management regime for the area's wildlife. In 1995, 20 years after the Agreement was signed, Lorraine Brooke published an analysis of Inuit experiences of the regime. This article extends her study, presenting the present structures of wildlife management in Nunavik, particularly as of the mid-2000s. It explores the extent to which the federal and provincial government commitments laid out in the JBNQA have been fulfilled and assesses the contemporary relevance of Brooke's conclusions. Based on interviews with Inuit and non-Inuit stakeholders, including bureaucrats and individual hunters and fishers, the paper outlines the diverse perspectives of those who administer and who are subject to the enforcement of Nunavik's wildlife management regime. It concludes that many of the findings from Brooke's analysis persist. The region continues to be subject to complex bureaucratic and administrative structures that routinely make power sharing between Inuit and non-Inuit government agencies problematic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Knowledge Co-production in Contested Spaces: An Evaluation of the North Slope Borough--Shell Baseline Studies Program.
- Author
-
Kettle, Nathan P.
- Subjects
- *
LOGISTICS , *ORGANIZATIONAL legitimacy , *SCIENCE & state , *INDIGENOUS peoples - Abstract
Supporting the development of trusted and usable science remains a key challenge in contested spaces. This paper evaluates a collaborative research agreement between the North Slope Borough of Alaska and Shell Exploration and Production Company--an agreement that was designed to improve collection of information and management of issues associated with the potential impacts of oil and gas development in the Arctic. The evaluation is based on six categories of knowledge co-production indicators: external factors, inputs, processes, outputs, outcomes, and impacts. Two sources of data were used to assess the indicators: interviews with steering committee members and external science managers (n = 16) and a review of steering committee minutes. Interpretation of the output and outcome indicators suggests that the Baseline Studies Program supported a broad range of research, though there were differences in how groups perceived the relevance and legitimacy of project outcomes. Several input, process, and external variables enabled the co-production of trusted science in an emergent boundary organization and contested space; these variables included governance arrangements, leveraged capacities, and the inclusion of traditional knowledge. Challenges to knowledge co-production on the North Slope include logistics, differences in cultures and decision contexts, and balancing trade-offs among perceived credibility, legitimacy, and relevance. Reinforced lessons learned included providing time to foster trust, developing adaptive governance approaches, and building capacity among scientists to translate community concerns into research questions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Arctic Sea Routes: Potential New Pathways for Nonindigenous Species Spread.
- Author
-
Duy Nong, Countryman, Amanda M., Warziniack, Travis, and Grey, Erin K.
- Subjects
- *
INTRODUCED species , *TRADE routes , *MARITIME shipping & the environment , *STATISTICAL matching , *CLIMATOLOGY - Abstract
This paper evaluates the potential effects of future commercial shipping through the Northern Sea Route and Northwest Passage on the spread of nonindigenous species (NIS) between Europe, the United States, and the Asia-Pacific region. We modeled NIS spread risk as a function of two factors: NIS introduction and NIS establishment. The change in risk of NIS introduction from one region to another is based on the expected commodity trade flow between the two regions given Arctic shipping routes. The risk of NIS establishment is based on current marine climate similarities between regions and projected 2030 terrestrial climate similarities. Results indicate that the United States, China, and Japan are at greatest risk for increased terrestrial and marine NIS spread to and from one another given their relatively high levels of trading activity and terrestrial and marine climate similarities. While increased trade between European and Asia-Pacific countries is expected in the future, only Japan has terrestrial climate similar enough to that of European countries to be considered a substantial terrestrial NIS spread risk, while China has the potential to increase the risk of marine NIS species spread in Europe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The Trans-Alaska Pipeline System Facilitates Shrub Establishment in Northern Alaska.
- Author
-
Dwight, Rosemary A. and Cairns, David M.
- Subjects
- *
SHRUBS , *PETROLEUM pipelines & the environment , *TUNDRAS , *PERMAFROST , *GLOBAL warming & the environment ,TRANS-Alaska Pipeline (Alaska) - Abstract
The Arctic tundra is undergoing many environmental changes in addition to increasing temperatures: these changes include permafrost degradation and increased shrubification. Disturbances related to infrastructure can also lead to similar environmental changes. The Trans-Alaska Pipeline System (TAPS) is an example of infrastructure that has made a major imprint on the Alaskan landscape. This paper assesses changes in shrub presence along the northernmost 255 km of the TAPS. We used historical satellite imagery from before construction of the TAPS in 1974 and contemporary satellite imagery from 2010 to 2016 to examine changes in shrub presence over time. We found a 51.8% increase in shrub presence adjacent to the pipeline compared to 2.6% in control areas. Additionally, shrub presence has increased significantly more in areas where the pipeline is buried, indicating that the disturbances linked to pipeline burial have likely created favorable conditions for shrub colonization. These results are important for predicting potential responses of tundra vegetation to disturbance, which will be crucial to forecasting the future of Arctic tundra vegetation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Systematic Review and Critique of the Contributions of Traditional Ecological Knowledge of Beluga Whales in the Marine Mammal Literature.
- Author
-
Breton-Honeyman, Kaitlin, Furgal, Chris M., and Hammill, Michael O.
- Subjects
- *
TRADITIONAL ecological knowledge , *WHITE whale , *ONLINE databases , *MARINE mammals , *SYSTEMATIC reviews - Abstract
In this study we systematically review and critique literature containing Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) of the beluga (Delphinapterus leucas) as a case study to gain insights into TEK's contributions to the marine mammal literature over the past four decades. We reviewed multiple searchable online databases, collected both academic and grey literature, and categorized it by geographic and disciplinary focus, as well as by the contribution of TEK to the source. Of the total 137 papers retained in the final analysis, 67% referred to the Canadian North, particularly the Hudson Bay subregion. Articles that included informal or anecdotal representations of TEK of belugas were the most prevalent. The number of papers containing TEK of belugas increased rapidly between 1975 and 2004 but appears to have leveled off since then. Biological papers represented the largest disciplinary focus (72%), followed by papers on management or co-management. This review showed that although knowledge of Indigenous peoples has made substantial contributions to the understanding of beluga, there is a lack of explicit collection, documentation, and use of TEK in the literature on belugas and particularly in the literature on beluga management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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