Integrated Management Planning in Canadas Northern Marine Environment: Engaging Coastal Communities

"In accordance with international law and custom, Canada declared an exclusive economic zone of 2.9 million km2 when it passed the Oceans Act in 1997. Extensive resource management responsibilities were associated with this declaration. An early effort to engage a northern coastal community in...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Eddy, Sara, Fast, Helen, Henley, Thomas
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10535/3498
Description
Summary:"In accordance with international law and custom, Canada declared an exclusive economic zone of 2.9 million km2 when it passed the Oceans Act in 1997. Extensive resource management responsibilities were associated with this declaration. An early effort to engage a northern coastal community in the first stages of an integrated management planning process focused on the small northern community of Churchill, Manitoba, and a 150 km stretch of the Hudson Bay coastline. The steps taken included communicating the importance of management planning for the towns coastal region; conducting personal interviews on coastal activities and concerns with a representative sample of the community; consolidating, tabulating, and mapping the results of these interviews; verifying results with the community; and evaluating the effectiveness of the process used. The approach taken, as well as the weeks spent living in the community, were important factors in developing a relationship of trust between the researcher and the community. Those interviewed were more comfortable participating once they had had a number of opportunities to become familiar with the context of the study, its relevance to them, and the researcher."