Conflict Arenas in the Management of Renewable Resources in the Canadian North: Perspectives Based on Conflicts and Responses in the James Bay Region, Quebec.

Portions of this background paper are drawn from previous publications. The publication appears here with the agreement of the Canadian Arctic Resources Committee, by email 2019/02/25. The mandate of the working group for which this background paper was prepared was to identify national and regional...

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Main Author: Feit, Harvey A.
Other Authors: Anthropology
Format: Book Part
Language:English
Published: Canadian Arctic Resources Committee 1984
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11375/23948
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spelling ftmcmaster:oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/23948 2024-09-15T17:50:50+00:00 Conflict Arenas in the Management of Renewable Resources in the Canadian North: Perspectives Based on Conflicts and Responses in the James Bay Region, Quebec. Feit, Harvey A. Anthropology 1984 http://hdl.handle.net/11375/23948 en eng Canadian Arctic Resources Committee Feit, Harvey A. 1984. “Conflict Arenas in the Management of Renewable Resources in the Canadian North: Perspectives Based on Conflicts and Responses in the James Bay Region, Quebec.” National and Regional Interests in the North. Ottawa: Canadian Arctic Resources Committee. Pp. 435-458. 0-919996-18-3 http://hdl.handle.net/11375/23948 Resource Conflicts Reconciliation Aboriginal Rights Hunting Wildlife Harvest Allocations Development Impacts Income Security James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement Fundamental Political Change Book chapter 1984 ftmcmaster 2024-06-26T04:35:26Z Portions of this background paper are drawn from previous publications. The publication appears here with the agreement of the Canadian Arctic Resources Committee, by email 2019/02/25. The mandate of the working group for which this background paper was prepared was to identify national and regional interests and conflicts in the management of renewable resources in the Canadian north. Then to explore the means available to reconcile or to deal effectively with such conflicts, highlighting those that are resistant to effective reconciliation. In the paper I comment mainly on the means being tried for reconciling conflicts in the James Bay region of Quebec. I consider five arenas of conflict: the recognition and definition of the basic rights of Native hunters; the management of the resources; the allocation of the resources among conflicting users; the provision of adequate cash incomes for Indigenous hunters; and the protection of renewable resources from the effects of non-renewable resource development. I review the provisions, logic and initial implementation of the James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement (JBNQA) of 1975 in these conflict arenas. I identify some of these conflicts over renewable resources in the North that may be resolvable in the short and medium terms primarily through recognition and enhancement of local control over lands and resources. I identify other aspects of these conflicts are not so resolvable. They require looking for means of making more fundamental political, economic, and cultural changes, including to Canada’s national interests. Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, Canada Council Doctoral Fellowship, Killiam Canada Council Post-Doctoral Fellowship and research grants, Canadian Arctic Resources Committee, McMaster University Department of Anthropology and Dean of Social Sciences. Book Part Arctic James Bay MacSphere (McMaster University)
institution Open Polar
collection MacSphere (McMaster University)
op_collection_id ftmcmaster
language English
topic Resource Conflicts
Reconciliation
Aboriginal Rights
Hunting
Wildlife Harvest Allocations
Development Impacts
Income Security
James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement
Fundamental Political Change
spellingShingle Resource Conflicts
Reconciliation
Aboriginal Rights
Hunting
Wildlife Harvest Allocations
Development Impacts
Income Security
James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement
Fundamental Political Change
Feit, Harvey A.
Conflict Arenas in the Management of Renewable Resources in the Canadian North: Perspectives Based on Conflicts and Responses in the James Bay Region, Quebec.
topic_facet Resource Conflicts
Reconciliation
Aboriginal Rights
Hunting
Wildlife Harvest Allocations
Development Impacts
Income Security
James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement
Fundamental Political Change
description Portions of this background paper are drawn from previous publications. The publication appears here with the agreement of the Canadian Arctic Resources Committee, by email 2019/02/25. The mandate of the working group for which this background paper was prepared was to identify national and regional interests and conflicts in the management of renewable resources in the Canadian north. Then to explore the means available to reconcile or to deal effectively with such conflicts, highlighting those that are resistant to effective reconciliation. In the paper I comment mainly on the means being tried for reconciling conflicts in the James Bay region of Quebec. I consider five arenas of conflict: the recognition and definition of the basic rights of Native hunters; the management of the resources; the allocation of the resources among conflicting users; the provision of adequate cash incomes for Indigenous hunters; and the protection of renewable resources from the effects of non-renewable resource development. I review the provisions, logic and initial implementation of the James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement (JBNQA) of 1975 in these conflict arenas. I identify some of these conflicts over renewable resources in the North that may be resolvable in the short and medium terms primarily through recognition and enhancement of local control over lands and resources. I identify other aspects of these conflicts are not so resolvable. They require looking for means of making more fundamental political, economic, and cultural changes, including to Canada’s national interests. Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, Canada Council Doctoral Fellowship, Killiam Canada Council Post-Doctoral Fellowship and research grants, Canadian Arctic Resources Committee, McMaster University Department of Anthropology and Dean of Social Sciences.
author2 Anthropology
format Book Part
author Feit, Harvey A.
author_facet Feit, Harvey A.
author_sort Feit, Harvey A.
title Conflict Arenas in the Management of Renewable Resources in the Canadian North: Perspectives Based on Conflicts and Responses in the James Bay Region, Quebec.
title_short Conflict Arenas in the Management of Renewable Resources in the Canadian North: Perspectives Based on Conflicts and Responses in the James Bay Region, Quebec.
title_full Conflict Arenas in the Management of Renewable Resources in the Canadian North: Perspectives Based on Conflicts and Responses in the James Bay Region, Quebec.
title_fullStr Conflict Arenas in the Management of Renewable Resources in the Canadian North: Perspectives Based on Conflicts and Responses in the James Bay Region, Quebec.
title_full_unstemmed Conflict Arenas in the Management of Renewable Resources in the Canadian North: Perspectives Based on Conflicts and Responses in the James Bay Region, Quebec.
title_sort conflict arenas in the management of renewable resources in the canadian north: perspectives based on conflicts and responses in the james bay region, quebec.
publisher Canadian Arctic Resources Committee
publishDate 1984
url http://hdl.handle.net/11375/23948
genre Arctic
James Bay
genre_facet Arctic
James Bay
op_relation Feit, Harvey A. 1984. “Conflict Arenas in the Management of Renewable Resources in the Canadian North: Perspectives Based on Conflicts and Responses in the James Bay Region, Quebec.” National and Regional Interests in the North. Ottawa: Canadian Arctic Resources Committee. Pp. 435-458.
0-919996-18-3
http://hdl.handle.net/11375/23948
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