This article examines the understanding of Cree hunters in relation to shifts in landscape resources and in particular the availability of two key subsistence wildlife species (i.e. Canada geese and woodland caribou) as a result of climatic and socio-environmental changes and their subsequent impacts on Cree subsistence activities and Cree culture. These results are based on questionnaires and interviews conducted among Cree hunters of the Eastern James Bay. Findings indicate that a number of Cree are concerned with changes in the physical landscape, in sociocultural and intergenerational dynamics as well as shifts in wildlife distribution, which are impacting their ability to use the land and to maintain traditional subsistence activities....
From time immemorial groups of Cree Indians from the interior woodland regions travelled down the lo...
In this article we discuss how the incorporation of selected technologies (i.e., outboard motor, sno...
This thesis is based mainly upon field work among the Cree community at Rupert House, Quebec, in the...
This article examines the understanding of Cree hunters in relation to shifts in landscape resources...
The Canadian Subarctic is undergoing climatic and environmental changes which are leading to wide-ra...
Socioenvironmental changes in Canada’s northern regions are likely to have wide-ranging implications...
Accounts of the adaptive responses of northern aboriginal peoples include examples of purposive modi...
Drawing on the traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) of the Lesser Slave Lake Cree, this paper shar...
Concerns about environmental changes have prompted scholars to search for adaptation lessons and ins...
This study investigates the importance of traditional hunting knowledge to Cree identity and experie...
Canada Geese (Branta canadensis) are an important wildlife food resource for Cree people living in c...
For the Cree First Nation communities of the eastern James Bay region in theCanadian Subarctic, loca...
Although there has been a tremendous amount of past and future development in the James Bay region o...
The eighteenth and nineteenth century Crees of west central Saskatchewan are the focus of this thesi...
Although there has been a tremendous amount of past and future development in the James Bay region o...
From time immemorial groups of Cree Indians from the interior woodland regions travelled down the lo...
In this article we discuss how the incorporation of selected technologies (i.e., outboard motor, sno...
This thesis is based mainly upon field work among the Cree community at Rupert House, Quebec, in the...
This article examines the understanding of Cree hunters in relation to shifts in landscape resources...
The Canadian Subarctic is undergoing climatic and environmental changes which are leading to wide-ra...
Socioenvironmental changes in Canada’s northern regions are likely to have wide-ranging implications...
Accounts of the adaptive responses of northern aboriginal peoples include examples of purposive modi...
Drawing on the traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) of the Lesser Slave Lake Cree, this paper shar...
Concerns about environmental changes have prompted scholars to search for adaptation lessons and ins...
This study investigates the importance of traditional hunting knowledge to Cree identity and experie...
Canada Geese (Branta canadensis) are an important wildlife food resource for Cree people living in c...
For the Cree First Nation communities of the eastern James Bay region in theCanadian Subarctic, loca...
Although there has been a tremendous amount of past and future development in the James Bay region o...
The eighteenth and nineteenth century Crees of west central Saskatchewan are the focus of this thesi...
Although there has been a tremendous amount of past and future development in the James Bay region o...
From time immemorial groups of Cree Indians from the interior woodland regions travelled down the lo...
In this article we discuss how the incorporation of selected technologies (i.e., outboard motor, sno...
This thesis is based mainly upon field work among the Cree community at Rupert House, Quebec, in the...