Filters: Tags: landscape scale conservation: Native-Aboriginal Ways (X) > Types: Citation (X)
233 results (46ms)
Filters
Date Range
Extensions Types Contacts
Categories |
This page allows you to search all of the reports and publications published in the scientific and technical reporting series by ADF&G's Commercial Fisheries, Sport Fish, and Subsistence divisions. There are three approaches you can use for searching these publications - The first two search through data fields in our publications database and the third will search through the text of the PDF documents themselves. Each method offers distinct advantages - roll the cursor over each search type to find out more!
Categories: Data,
Publication;
Types: Citation,
Downloadable,
Map Service,
OGC WFS Layer,
OGC WMS Layer,
Shapefile;
Tags: A1-Fisheries,
Adaptation planning 1-Best management practices,
Adaptation planning 1-Best management practices,
landscape scale conservation: Alaska,
landscape scale conservation: Native-Aboriginal Ways
Categories: Data,
Publication;
Types: Citation,
Downloadable,
Map Service,
OGC WFS Layer,
OGC WMS Layer,
Shapefile;
Tags: ADAPTATION PLANNING 1-BEST MANAGEMENT PRACTICES,
Adaptation planning 1-Best management practices,
LANDSCAPE SCALE CONSERVATION: NORTHWEST TERRITORIES,
landscape scale conservation: Native-Aboriginal Ways
This dissertation examines the conflict between Native hunters and federal wildlife conservation programs within the present-day borders of the Northwest Territories and Nunavut from the late nineteenth century to the end of the 1960s. From the first conservation legislation specific to the northern Canada in 1894 to the broad range of responses to the so-called caribou crisis of the post-war era, the introduction of wildlife conservation in the Northwest Territories brought a series of dramatic changes to the lives of Dene and Inuit hunters in the region. The imposition of restrictive game laws, the enclosing of traditional hunting grounds within national parks and game sanctuaries, and the first tentative introduction...
Categories: Data,
Publication;
Types: Citation,
Downloadable,
Map Service,
OGC WFS Layer,
OGC WMS Layer,
Shapefile;
Tags: Adaptation planning 1-Best Management Practices,
Adaptation planning 1-Best management practices,
Landscape Scale Conservation: Yukon,
landscape scale conservation: Native-Aboriginal Ways
Traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) and the information and insights it offers to natural resource research and management have been given much attention in recent years. On the practical question of how TEK is accessed and used together with scientific knowledge, most work to date has examined documentation and methods of recording and disseminating information. Relatively little has been done regarding exchanges between scientific and traditional knowledge. This paper examines three workshop settings in which such exchanges were intended outcomes. The Barrow Symposium on Sea Ice, the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Restoration Program Synthesis/Information Workshops, and the Alaska Beluga Whale Committee illuminate...
Categories: Publication;
Types: Citation;
Tags: Adaptation planning 1-Best management practices,
landscape scale conservation: Native-Aboriginal Ways
If you are interested in applying for Kobuk Valley National Park SRC membership, contact the Superintendent at P.O. Box 1029, Kotzebue, AK 99752, or visit the park Web site at: http://www.nps.gov/kova/contacts.htm. If you are interested in applying for Denali National Park SRC membership, contact the Superintendent at P.O. Box 9, Denali Park, AK 99755, or visit the park Web site at: http://www.nps.gov/dena/contacts.htm.
Categories: Data,
Publication;
Types: Citation,
Downloadable,
Map Service,
OGC WFS Layer,
OGC WMS Layer,
Shapefile;
Tags: Adaptation Planning 1-Best Management Practices,
Adaptation planning 1-Best management practices,
Landscape Scale Conservation: Agency Management Plans,
United States Federal Agencies,
landscape scale conservation: Native-Aboriginal Ways
This paper explores a particular experience of cultural bridging between the Heritage Department of the Tr'ondëk Hwëch'in (TH) First Nation and academics and government funders taking part in the 2007 - 09 International Polar Year. The TH Heritage Department acted as lead researcher on the project entitled Documenting Traditional Knowledge in Relation to Climate Change. TH Heritage staff spearheaded and largely carried out the project work. Academic researchers, acting as contractors, collaborated in some project activities and produced academic papers summarizing the work. This collaboration provided a rare opportunity for the TH Heritage Department to share the research it has conducted for more than a decade...
This thesis is about aboriginal and treaty rights to wildlife and wildlife harvesting, including the right to make decisions about these activities in the Northwest Territories. It deals with the erosion of these rights in the period before 1982 and then traces the protection, redefinition and resurgence of these rights since 1982, when section 35 of the Constitution Act, 1982 was enacted. Section 35 affords constitutional protection to treaty and aboriginal rights including those rights negotiated through modern land claim agreements. This thesis shows that the effect of section 35 jurisprudence and land claims has been to halt the erosion of aboriginal and treaty rights to wildlife and to enhance local control...
Categories: Publication;
Types: Citation;
Tags: Adaptation planning 1-Best management practices,
landscape scale conservation: Native-Aboriginal Ways
Traditional ecological knowledge within specific cultural and geographical contexts was explored during an interactive session at the 8th World Wilderness Congress to identify traditional principles of sustainability. Participants analyzed the traditional knowledge contained in ten posters from Canada and Alaska and identified and discussed the traditional principles of sustainability inherent in specific examples. An invited panel discussed the opportunities and challenges of incorporating traditional principles of sustainability in wilderness management. This paper reports on principles of sustainability and associated cultural concepts related to indigenous engagement with homelands and makes suggestions for...
Categories: Publication;
Types: Citation;
Tags: Adaptation planning 1-Best management practices,
landscape scale conservation: Native-Aboriginal Ways
What are these "sensitive political operations" that extend and expand state power? Here, [James Ferguson] is referring to the extension of bureaucratic forms of management and control. We have seen that from the vantage point of development organizations, the "problems" of development are seen as technical. Thus, their solution generally requires the application of expert knowledge and the provision of government services. Given the institutional context in which development is carried out, this means the creation of new bureaucratic structures-often physically located in the areas experiencing "development." Indeed, Ferguson argues that, at least in some cases, the expansion of the state and the bureaucratization...
Categories: Publication;
Types: Citation;
Tags: Adaptation planning 1-Best management practices,
landscape scale conservation: Native-Aboriginal Ways
Negotiating the complexities of wildlife management increasingly requires new approaches, especially where data may be limited. A robust combination of traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) and western science has the potential to improve management decisions and enhance the validity of ecological inferences. We examined the strengths and weaknesses of predicting woodland caribou (Rangifer tarandus caribou) habitat selection with resource selection functions (RSF) based on western science and TEK-based models within the territory of the Taku River Tlingit First Nation of northern British Columbia. We developed seasonal RSF models with data from 10 global positioning system collared caribou. We generated TEK-based...
Categories: Publication;
Types: Citation;
Tags: Adaptation planning 1-Best management practices,
Baseline 5-Data,
Caribou,
Species of Concern: Mammals,
Woodland Herd,
This thesis focuses on transactional process involved in the construction and operation of the Kuskokwim River Salmon Management Working Group. This cooperative wildlife management mechanism gives Yup'ik commercial and subsistence fishermen and other users a direct role, with the Alaska Department of Fish and Game, in salmon management. Transactions involving participants' knowledge and values are described in three processes: (1) the establishment of a management body and its operating rules; (2) the mediation of power in decision-making; and, (3) fishery management which uses both "science" and "fishermen's knowledge." Results indicate that through cooperation in decision-making, data gathering, and other management...
Categories: Publication;
Types: Citation;
Tags: Adaptation planning 1-Best management practices,
landscape scale conservation: Native-Aboriginal Ways
|
|