Aboriginal tourism in northern Canada : how collaborative research can improve community engagement in tourism projects

Meeting: Celebrating Dialogue : An International SAS2 Forum, November 3, 2008, Carleton University, Ottawa, ON, CA Situated in the James Bay area, the Cree Nation is comprised of 15,000 people in nine communities spread out over 350,000 square kilometers. The project’s goal is to position Eeyou Istc...

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Main Authors: Blangy, Sylvie, McGinley, Robin, Chevalier, Jacques M.
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: Sylvie Blangy (consultant) 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10625/36461
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spelling ftidrcdspace:oai:idl-bnc-idrc.dspacedirect.org:10625/36461 2023-12-24T10:16:45+01:00 Aboriginal tourism in northern Canada : how collaborative research can improve community engagement in tourism projects Blangy, Sylvie McGinley, Robin Chevalier, Jacques M. 2008 1 digital file (4 p. : ill.) application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10625/36461 en eng Sylvie Blangy (consultant) http://hdl.handle.net/10625/36461 FIRST NATIONS ABORIGINAL PEOPLE CREE INDIGENOUS PEOPLES TOURISM DEVELOPMENT COMMUNITY-BASED NATURAL RESOURCE MANAGEMENT PARTCIPATORY RESEARCH SOCIAL ANALYSIS SYSTEMS QUEBEC CANADA NORTH AND CENTRAL AMERICA Conference Paper 2008 ftidrcdspace 2023-11-26T00:16:18Z Meeting: Celebrating Dialogue : An International SAS2 Forum, November 3, 2008, Carleton University, Ottawa, ON, CA Situated in the James Bay area, the Cree Nation is comprised of 15,000 people in nine communities spread out over 350,000 square kilometers. The project’s goal is to position Eeyou Istchee (the traditional territory and homeland of the Cree) as a Cree tourism destination for external markets. Participants were able to share knowledge, build bridges, develop links between communities and operators, and work together at the regional level. Community Tourism Officers were provided with tools they can use independently at the community level and for other meetings (Band Council). Conference Object First Nations James Bay International Development Research Centre: IDRC Digital Library Canada
institution Open Polar
collection International Development Research Centre: IDRC Digital Library
op_collection_id ftidrcdspace
language English
topic FIRST NATIONS
ABORIGINAL PEOPLE
CREE
INDIGENOUS PEOPLES
TOURISM DEVELOPMENT
COMMUNITY-BASED NATURAL RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
PARTCIPATORY RESEARCH
SOCIAL ANALYSIS SYSTEMS
QUEBEC
CANADA
NORTH AND CENTRAL AMERICA
spellingShingle FIRST NATIONS
ABORIGINAL PEOPLE
CREE
INDIGENOUS PEOPLES
TOURISM DEVELOPMENT
COMMUNITY-BASED NATURAL RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
PARTCIPATORY RESEARCH
SOCIAL ANALYSIS SYSTEMS
QUEBEC
CANADA
NORTH AND CENTRAL AMERICA
Blangy, Sylvie
McGinley, Robin
Chevalier, Jacques M.
Aboriginal tourism in northern Canada : how collaborative research can improve community engagement in tourism projects
topic_facet FIRST NATIONS
ABORIGINAL PEOPLE
CREE
INDIGENOUS PEOPLES
TOURISM DEVELOPMENT
COMMUNITY-BASED NATURAL RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
PARTCIPATORY RESEARCH
SOCIAL ANALYSIS SYSTEMS
QUEBEC
CANADA
NORTH AND CENTRAL AMERICA
description Meeting: Celebrating Dialogue : An International SAS2 Forum, November 3, 2008, Carleton University, Ottawa, ON, CA Situated in the James Bay area, the Cree Nation is comprised of 15,000 people in nine communities spread out over 350,000 square kilometers. The project’s goal is to position Eeyou Istchee (the traditional territory and homeland of the Cree) as a Cree tourism destination for external markets. Participants were able to share knowledge, build bridges, develop links between communities and operators, and work together at the regional level. Community Tourism Officers were provided with tools they can use independently at the community level and for other meetings (Band Council).
format Conference Object
author Blangy, Sylvie
McGinley, Robin
Chevalier, Jacques M.
author_facet Blangy, Sylvie
McGinley, Robin
Chevalier, Jacques M.
author_sort Blangy, Sylvie
title Aboriginal tourism in northern Canada : how collaborative research can improve community engagement in tourism projects
title_short Aboriginal tourism in northern Canada : how collaborative research can improve community engagement in tourism projects
title_full Aboriginal tourism in northern Canada : how collaborative research can improve community engagement in tourism projects
title_fullStr Aboriginal tourism in northern Canada : how collaborative research can improve community engagement in tourism projects
title_full_unstemmed Aboriginal tourism in northern Canada : how collaborative research can improve community engagement in tourism projects
title_sort aboriginal tourism in northern canada : how collaborative research can improve community engagement in tourism projects
publisher Sylvie Blangy (consultant)
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/10625/36461
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre First Nations
James Bay
genre_facet First Nations
James Bay
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10625/36461
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