Arctic Peoples, Culture, Resilience and Caribou

The three-year program is comprised of twelve projects in Nunavut, Northwest Territories, the Yukon, Nunavik and Nunatsiavut. Most projects are community-based case studies (Aklavik, Tutoyaktuk, and Deline) which allow for indepth collaboration and inquiry. Another group of projects allows researche...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dickson, Cindy, Parlee, Brenda, Larocque, Bridget, Furgal, Chris, Loring, Eric, Ellsworth, Leanna, Mandeville, Lee, Meakin, Stephanie
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: Canadian Cryospheric Information Network 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5443/11447
https://www.polardata.ca/pdcsearch/?doi_id=11447
id ftdatacite:10.5443/11447
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language English
topic Adaptation
Caribou
Climate change
Indigenous peoples
Northerners
Resilience
Social change
Traditional Knowledge
International Polar Year-Arctic Peoples, Culture, Resilience and Caribou
spellingShingle Adaptation
Caribou
Climate change
Indigenous peoples
Northerners
Resilience
Social change
Traditional Knowledge
International Polar Year-Arctic Peoples, Culture, Resilience and Caribou
Dickson, Cindy
Parlee, Brenda
Larocque, Bridget
Furgal, Chris
Loring, Eric
Ellsworth, Leanna
Mandeville, Lee
Meakin, Stephanie
Arctic Peoples, Culture, Resilience and Caribou
topic_facet Adaptation
Caribou
Climate change
Indigenous peoples
Northerners
Resilience
Social change
Traditional Knowledge
International Polar Year-Arctic Peoples, Culture, Resilience and Caribou
description The three-year program is comprised of twelve projects in Nunavut, Northwest Territories, the Yukon, Nunavik and Nunatsiavut. Most projects are community-based case studies (Aklavik, Tutoyaktuk, and Deline) which allow for indepth collaboration and inquiry. Another group of projects allows researchers to learn about cross cutting themes of resilience relevant to all communities in ACRC regions of Nunavut, Yukon and Northwest Territories. A third group of projects is aimed at synthesizing and compiling data gathered from the project in ways that will enable partners to meaningfully interpret and communicate the knowledge and experience of northern communities dealing with caribou population variability and decline. The perspectives of northern communities on environmental change vary significantly by region; while some communities have significant knowledge and capacity to deal with variability and change in resources such as caribou, others have had limited experience, knowledge and skills for coping, mitigating or adapting to change. Even within communities, the perspectives can be diverse depending on such variables as: income and education, age, gender, knowledge/experience in land-based activities, social networks (for knowledge and resource sharing), and role in governance (e.g., representation on co-management boards). ACRC has engaged with Inuit, Dene and Gwich'in communities from Nunavut, Northwest Territories and Yukon. Multiple methods from archival to oral history research, individual interviews to large format workshops, desktop to on-the-land activities have provided researchers with opportunities to learn about resilience from caribou hunters (men and women), community leaders, resource managers, elders, adults and youth from more than nineteen arctic and subarctic communities. : Purpose: How will Arctic Aboriginal communities continue to be resilient and healthy in relation to the social and ecological changes which threaten important human-environment relationships now and in the future? The theoretical thread or theme linking all the projects and case studies is resilience and adaptive capacity. Although resilience has multiple meanings in different disciplines we are interested in individual, household and community resilience to environment change - specifically barren ground caribou population variability and change. Theoretically, we know that resilience is informed by many socio-economic, cultural and ecological factors. Among the most well understood are: human social networks, traditional knowledge and skills, and governance and institutional arrangements. By exploring these variables, as well as other emergent elements of resilience through this series of projects we hope to gain a better understanding of social-ecological health in Arctic communities. : Summary: Social and ecological change in the North is having an impact on human-environment relationships, leading to questions about how Arctic Aboriginal communities will adapt and cope with these changes. This project is focusing on the important relationship between Arctic people and caribou in communities where caribou is an important food source and cultural feature. The human-caribou relationship and the importance of social networks, traditional knowledge, skills, language, governance and institutional capacity to community resiliency are being investigated in three case study communities to determine community resiliency in the face of change.
format Dataset
author Dickson, Cindy
Parlee, Brenda
Larocque, Bridget
Furgal, Chris
Loring, Eric
Ellsworth, Leanna
Mandeville, Lee
Meakin, Stephanie
author_facet Dickson, Cindy
Parlee, Brenda
Larocque, Bridget
Furgal, Chris
Loring, Eric
Ellsworth, Leanna
Mandeville, Lee
Meakin, Stephanie
author_sort Dickson, Cindy
title Arctic Peoples, Culture, Resilience and Caribou
title_short Arctic Peoples, Culture, Resilience and Caribou
title_full Arctic Peoples, Culture, Resilience and Caribou
title_fullStr Arctic Peoples, Culture, Resilience and Caribou
title_full_unstemmed Arctic Peoples, Culture, Resilience and Caribou
title_sort arctic peoples, culture, resilience and caribou
publisher Canadian Cryospheric Information Network
publishDate 2016
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5443/11447
https://www.polardata.ca/pdcsearch/?doi_id=11447
long_lat ENVELOPE(-135.011,-135.011,68.219,68.219)
ENVELOPE(-123.406,-123.406,65.198,65.198)
geographic Arctic
Nunavut
Yukon
Northwest Territories
Nunavik
Aklavik
Deline
geographic_facet Arctic
Nunavut
Yukon
Northwest Territories
Nunavik
Aklavik
Deline
genre Aklavik
Arctic
Climate change
International Polar Year
inuit
Northwest Territories
Nunavut
Subarctic
Nunavik
Yukon
genre_facet Aklavik
Arctic
Climate change
International Polar Year
inuit
Northwest Territories
Nunavut
Subarctic
Nunavik
Yukon
op_rights Limited
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5443/11447
_version_ 1766073535978012672
spelling ftdatacite:10.5443/11447 2023-05-15T13:08:05+02:00 Arctic Peoples, Culture, Resilience and Caribou Dickson, Cindy Parlee, Brenda Larocque, Bridget Furgal, Chris Loring, Eric Ellsworth, Leanna Mandeville, Lee Meakin, Stephanie 2016 https://dx.doi.org/10.5443/11447 https://www.polardata.ca/pdcsearch/?doi_id=11447 en eng Canadian Cryospheric Information Network Limited Adaptation Caribou Climate change Indigenous peoples Northerners Resilience Social change Traditional Knowledge International Polar Year-Arctic Peoples, Culture, Resilience and Caribou dataset Dataset 2016 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5443/11447 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z The three-year program is comprised of twelve projects in Nunavut, Northwest Territories, the Yukon, Nunavik and Nunatsiavut. Most projects are community-based case studies (Aklavik, Tutoyaktuk, and Deline) which allow for indepth collaboration and inquiry. Another group of projects allows researchers to learn about cross cutting themes of resilience relevant to all communities in ACRC regions of Nunavut, Yukon and Northwest Territories. A third group of projects is aimed at synthesizing and compiling data gathered from the project in ways that will enable partners to meaningfully interpret and communicate the knowledge and experience of northern communities dealing with caribou population variability and decline. The perspectives of northern communities on environmental change vary significantly by region; while some communities have significant knowledge and capacity to deal with variability and change in resources such as caribou, others have had limited experience, knowledge and skills for coping, mitigating or adapting to change. Even within communities, the perspectives can be diverse depending on such variables as: income and education, age, gender, knowledge/experience in land-based activities, social networks (for knowledge and resource sharing), and role in governance (e.g., representation on co-management boards). ACRC has engaged with Inuit, Dene and Gwich'in communities from Nunavut, Northwest Territories and Yukon. Multiple methods from archival to oral history research, individual interviews to large format workshops, desktop to on-the-land activities have provided researchers with opportunities to learn about resilience from caribou hunters (men and women), community leaders, resource managers, elders, adults and youth from more than nineteen arctic and subarctic communities. : Purpose: How will Arctic Aboriginal communities continue to be resilient and healthy in relation to the social and ecological changes which threaten important human-environment relationships now and in the future? The theoretical thread or theme linking all the projects and case studies is resilience and adaptive capacity. Although resilience has multiple meanings in different disciplines we are interested in individual, household and community resilience to environment change - specifically barren ground caribou population variability and change. Theoretically, we know that resilience is informed by many socio-economic, cultural and ecological factors. Among the most well understood are: human social networks, traditional knowledge and skills, and governance and institutional arrangements. By exploring these variables, as well as other emergent elements of resilience through this series of projects we hope to gain a better understanding of social-ecological health in Arctic communities. : Summary: Social and ecological change in the North is having an impact on human-environment relationships, leading to questions about how Arctic Aboriginal communities will adapt and cope with these changes. This project is focusing on the important relationship between Arctic people and caribou in communities where caribou is an important food source and cultural feature. The human-caribou relationship and the importance of social networks, traditional knowledge, skills, language, governance and institutional capacity to community resiliency are being investigated in three case study communities to determine community resiliency in the face of change. Dataset Aklavik Arctic Climate change International Polar Year inuit Northwest Territories Nunavut Subarctic Nunavik Yukon DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Arctic Nunavut Yukon Northwest Territories Nunavik Aklavik ENVELOPE(-135.011,-135.011,68.219,68.219) Deline ENVELOPE(-123.406,-123.406,65.198,65.198)