The social and environmental impacts of large-scale industrial development have had direct and extensive impacts on the Cree communities of eastern James Bay, northern Quebec. The signing of the 'New Relationship Agreement' between the Quebec Crees and Quebec Government (2002) formalized measures for local participation in overseeing the management of natural resources and development projects in the region. This initiative purports to provide Crees with a voice in decisions relating to projects that affect their lives and the lands they occupy. In return, the New Agreement paved the way for the development of the EM-1-A & Rupert Diversion Project and ensured the support of the regional Cree leadership. This study presents the perspectives...
To date, most analyses of hydro-electric development portray the environment and Aboriginal Peoples ...
This thesis, based on my ethnographic research in Moose Factory, Ontario documents the history of Mo...
Although there has been a tremendous amount of past and future development in the James Bay region o...
This article examines various political strategies employed by Nemaska Crees in northern Quebec to d...
Concerns about environmental changes have prompted scholars to search for adaptation lessons and ins...
The role of local communities in protected area (PA) management has generated heated theoretical and...
This research examines the conflict between provincial and Indigenous land use planning approaches i...
This paper will focus on how the Cree have had to adapt and put in force various policies and measur...
During the last decade, a number of large-scale resource development projects have been proposed for...
In 2001 the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources released the Northern Boreal Initiative, outlining...
This thesis, based on my ethnographic research in Moose Factory, Ontario documents the history of Mo...
Through an ethnographic approach, characterized by a long and inductive fieldwork, the author of thi...
The matter of native land rights is making Canadian head lines. This issue has been stated in the Pr...
The matter of native land rights is making Canadian head lines. This issue has been stated in the Pr...
This dissertation proceeds from the Algonquins of Barriere Lake’s enactments of Indigenous law as a ...
To date, most analyses of hydro-electric development portray the environment and Aboriginal Peoples ...
This thesis, based on my ethnographic research in Moose Factory, Ontario documents the history of Mo...
Although there has been a tremendous amount of past and future development in the James Bay region o...
This article examines various political strategies employed by Nemaska Crees in northern Quebec to d...
Concerns about environmental changes have prompted scholars to search for adaptation lessons and ins...
The role of local communities in protected area (PA) management has generated heated theoretical and...
This research examines the conflict between provincial and Indigenous land use planning approaches i...
This paper will focus on how the Cree have had to adapt and put in force various policies and measur...
During the last decade, a number of large-scale resource development projects have been proposed for...
In 2001 the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources released the Northern Boreal Initiative, outlining...
This thesis, based on my ethnographic research in Moose Factory, Ontario documents the history of Mo...
Through an ethnographic approach, characterized by a long and inductive fieldwork, the author of thi...
The matter of native land rights is making Canadian head lines. This issue has been stated in the Pr...
The matter of native land rights is making Canadian head lines. This issue has been stated in the Pr...
This dissertation proceeds from the Algonquins of Barriere Lake’s enactments of Indigenous law as a ...
To date, most analyses of hydro-electric development portray the environment and Aboriginal Peoples ...
This thesis, based on my ethnographic research in Moose Factory, Ontario documents the history of Mo...
Although there has been a tremendous amount of past and future development in the James Bay region o...