Collaborative water governance in Indigenous territories requires the building of a nation-to-nation relationship where different water worldviews and knowledges are acknowledged, valued, and included in water governance. This article presents the Mistawasis Nêhiyawak Honour the Water Governance Framework, an alternative collaborative water governance approach in Saskatchewan, Canada. The Nêhiyawak principles, identity, knowledge, and self-determination are its foundation. Equitable dialogue is the central axis. The framework represents an alternative water governance structure to the current Canadian system that may more effectively respond to the water challenges of this First Nation. This framework supports the appeal from Mistawasis Fir...
In Canada, the water crisis increasingly felt around the world is being experienced primarily in sma...
Access to drinkable water is essential to human life. The consequence of unsafe drinking water can b...
This paper presents Indigenous community-led, collaborative, and community-engaged water governance ...
In Canada, water governance is confronted with colonial legacies that historically have marginalized...
First Nations in British Columbia (BC), Canada, have historically been—and largely continue to be—e...
Water governance is a priority for Indigenous peoples, whose complex relationships to water are esse...
In 2015, the federal government committed to ending drinking water advisories in First Nations commu...
The importance of Indigenous knowledge systems for environmental decision-making is now widely recog...
While international instruments and a few state governments endorse the “free, prior and infor...
Indigenous peoples have maintained that sovereignty over their waters is a priority for them. Yet, m...
With increasing legal recognition of Aboriginal rights and title, growing calls for collaborative wa...
First Nations communities in Canada are disproportionately affected by poor water quality. As one ex...
This thesis traces how Secwépemc people conceptualize and (re)imagine their relationships with water...
Meaningful lessons about decolonising water infrastructure (social, economic and political) can be l...
High rates of resource extraction in northern and western Canada are creating intense socio-environm...
In Canada, the water crisis increasingly felt around the world is being experienced primarily in sma...
Access to drinkable water is essential to human life. The consequence of unsafe drinking water can b...
This paper presents Indigenous community-led, collaborative, and community-engaged water governance ...
In Canada, water governance is confronted with colonial legacies that historically have marginalized...
First Nations in British Columbia (BC), Canada, have historically been—and largely continue to be—e...
Water governance is a priority for Indigenous peoples, whose complex relationships to water are esse...
In 2015, the federal government committed to ending drinking water advisories in First Nations commu...
The importance of Indigenous knowledge systems for environmental decision-making is now widely recog...
While international instruments and a few state governments endorse the “free, prior and infor...
Indigenous peoples have maintained that sovereignty over their waters is a priority for them. Yet, m...
With increasing legal recognition of Aboriginal rights and title, growing calls for collaborative wa...
First Nations communities in Canada are disproportionately affected by poor water quality. As one ex...
This thesis traces how Secwépemc people conceptualize and (re)imagine their relationships with water...
Meaningful lessons about decolonising water infrastructure (social, economic and political) can be l...
High rates of resource extraction in northern and western Canada are creating intense socio-environm...
In Canada, the water crisis increasingly felt around the world is being experienced primarily in sma...
Access to drinkable water is essential to human life. The consequence of unsafe drinking water can b...
This paper presents Indigenous community-led, collaborative, and community-engaged water governance ...