The success of a co-management organization rests with the user communities. Over the years members of the Porcupine Caribou Management Board have observed that it is the knowledge and concerns held by the people in the communities which are affected by caribou management policies, that provide the greatest inspiration to the Board. In return, the Board must never lose sight of its primary objective which is to manage and conserve the Porcupine Caribou Herd by incorporating native participation at every level of decision-making
The responsibility of the Coordinating Committee in the management of wildlife, including caribou, i...
and Russia that winter i n northern coniferous forests and summer i n tundra of the Arct ic have pro...
This paper is about a major caribou herd that may be in trouble and the belief of the Labrador Inuit...
A comparison of indigenous and scientific forms of wildlife data gathering and conservation/manageme...
Co-management arrangements are commonly framed with the theoretical assumption that community manag...
The conservation of wildlife species plays a profound part in development issues in northern areas. ...
The Porcupine Caribou H e r d is a population of 160,000 barren-ground caribou (Rangifer tarandus gr...
Aboriginal people have a long relationship with caribou, and caribou - especially the large migrator...
The conditions allowing innovative collective learning of the unpredictable dynamics of caribou popu...
Over the past decade, northern Canada has experienced a substantial increase in government reliance ...
The Hunting Fishing and Trapping Co-ordinating Committee (HFTCC), created at the signature of the Ja...
The operation of Caribou Québec will be based on the general principle that the resource users (nati...
The field of wildlife management is evolving and adopting Integrated Resource Management (IRM) appro...
In 1993 the Nunavut Land Claims Agreement (NLCA) was signed and this lead to the creation of Nunavut...
Abstract: We examined the public process used to develop the 1996—2001 Fortymile Caribou (Rangifer t...
The responsibility of the Coordinating Committee in the management of wildlife, including caribou, i...
and Russia that winter i n northern coniferous forests and summer i n tundra of the Arct ic have pro...
This paper is about a major caribou herd that may be in trouble and the belief of the Labrador Inuit...
A comparison of indigenous and scientific forms of wildlife data gathering and conservation/manageme...
Co-management arrangements are commonly framed with the theoretical assumption that community manag...
The conservation of wildlife species plays a profound part in development issues in northern areas. ...
The Porcupine Caribou H e r d is a population of 160,000 barren-ground caribou (Rangifer tarandus gr...
Aboriginal people have a long relationship with caribou, and caribou - especially the large migrator...
The conditions allowing innovative collective learning of the unpredictable dynamics of caribou popu...
Over the past decade, northern Canada has experienced a substantial increase in government reliance ...
The Hunting Fishing and Trapping Co-ordinating Committee (HFTCC), created at the signature of the Ja...
The operation of Caribou Québec will be based on the general principle that the resource users (nati...
The field of wildlife management is evolving and adopting Integrated Resource Management (IRM) appro...
In 1993 the Nunavut Land Claims Agreement (NLCA) was signed and this lead to the creation of Nunavut...
Abstract: We examined the public process used to develop the 1996—2001 Fortymile Caribou (Rangifer t...
The responsibility of the Coordinating Committee in the management of wildlife, including caribou, i...
and Russia that winter i n northern coniferous forests and summer i n tundra of the Arct ic have pro...
This paper is about a major caribou herd that may be in trouble and the belief of the Labrador Inuit...