The Innu of northern Labrador, Canada have undergone profound transitions in recent decades with important implications for conservation, food and health policy. The change from permanent nomadic hunting, gathering and trapping in 'the country' (nutshimit) to sedentary village life (known as 'sedentarisation') has been associated with a marked decline in physical and mental health. The overarching response of the national government has been to emphasize village-based and institutional solutions. We show that changing the balance back to country-based activities would address both the primary causes of the crisis and improve the health and well-being of the Innu. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork, interviews with Innu older people (Tshenut)...
Throughout history, forests dwellers have adapted to permanent changes of forest ecosystems that, in...
Subsistence, including hunting, sharing the proceeds of the hunt, and the social relations associate...
Abstract Background Participation in on-the-land prog...
The Innu of Northern Labrador, Canada have undergone profound transitions in recent decades with imp...
Around the world, Indigenous people continue to experience some of the greatest health disadvantages...
Socioenvironmental changes in Canada’s northern regions are likely to have wide-ranging implications...
Inuit living in the Canadian Arctic have undergone rapid societal changes in the last half century, ...
Indigenous participation in land-based practices such as hunting, fishing, ceremony, and land care h...
Abstract: Indigenous participation in land-based practices such as hunting, fishing, ceremony, and l...
Climate change leading to a drastic decline in caribou populations has prompted strict hunting regul...
Indigenous peoples of Canada are more affected by chronic health disparities relative to the rest of...
Considerable attention has been devoted to the possible effects of global climate change on the envi...
The activities of hunting, fishing and trapping in northwest Alberta have histories, in all likeliho...
The Eeyouch are a First Nations (Cree) population that live above 49.6°N latitude in Eeyou Istchee i...
Many caribou populations are declining across the Circumpolar North, presenting challenges for many ...
Throughout history, forests dwellers have adapted to permanent changes of forest ecosystems that, in...
Subsistence, including hunting, sharing the proceeds of the hunt, and the social relations associate...
Abstract Background Participation in on-the-land prog...
The Innu of Northern Labrador, Canada have undergone profound transitions in recent decades with imp...
Around the world, Indigenous people continue to experience some of the greatest health disadvantages...
Socioenvironmental changes in Canada’s northern regions are likely to have wide-ranging implications...
Inuit living in the Canadian Arctic have undergone rapid societal changes in the last half century, ...
Indigenous participation in land-based practices such as hunting, fishing, ceremony, and land care h...
Abstract: Indigenous participation in land-based practices such as hunting, fishing, ceremony, and l...
Climate change leading to a drastic decline in caribou populations has prompted strict hunting regul...
Indigenous peoples of Canada are more affected by chronic health disparities relative to the rest of...
Considerable attention has been devoted to the possible effects of global climate change on the envi...
The activities of hunting, fishing and trapping in northwest Alberta have histories, in all likeliho...
The Eeyouch are a First Nations (Cree) population that live above 49.6°N latitude in Eeyou Istchee i...
Many caribou populations are declining across the Circumpolar North, presenting challenges for many ...
Throughout history, forests dwellers have adapted to permanent changes of forest ecosystems that, in...
Subsistence, including hunting, sharing the proceeds of the hunt, and the social relations associate...
Abstract Background Participation in on-the-land prog...