International Management of Aboriginal Subsistence Whaling

"The International Convention for the Regulation of Whaling, 1946, continues the special exemption from the regulations designed to regulate commercial whaling which were given to aboriginal whaling in the first international whaling Convention signed in 1931. When the International Whaling Com...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gambell, Ray
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: 1991
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10535/1686
Description
Summary:"The International Convention for the Regulation of Whaling, 1946, continues the special exemption from the regulations designed to regulate commercial whaling which were given to aboriginal whaling in the first international whaling Convention signed in 1931. When the International Whaling Commission established its management procedure for commercial whaling in 1975, it specifically excluded from its scope the whaling operations carried out by aboriginal peoples for subsistence purposes. This development was chiefly the result of the need to accommodate the longstanding Alaskan Eskimo hunt for the bowhead whale, which was then regarded as the most endangered of the whale species. As a result a separate but related management procedure for subsistence whaling operations was developed. This took some account of the status of the whale stocks being harvested, but placed greater weight on the perceived dependence of the native whalers and their communities for the hunt. This need is expressed not just in the nutritional terms of the weight of meat and other products which can be derived from the whale carcases, but also the part played by the whale hunt and the preparation and distribution of the products in the fabric of the local society. The International Whaling Commission emphasises the importance of involving the indigenous communities in the determination of the local need for such whaling, and in the monitoring and control of the whaling operations at the local level once the international and national regulations have been adopted."