Hunting Wildlife and Wage Employment: Resource Use Strategies at Fort George, Quebec.

I want to thank the Chisasibi people of Fort George for their support and for helping me to understand something about how they hunted and used and stewarded their lands. Most of the quantitative records that I used in this research were the result of earlier collaborations of Chisasibi people: with...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Feit, Harvey
Other Authors: Anthropology
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: 1978
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11375/23960
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record_format openpolar
spelling ftmcmaster:oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/23960 2024-09-09T19:36:25+00:00 Hunting Wildlife and Wage Employment: Resource Use Strategies at Fort George, Quebec. Feit, Harvey Anthropology 1978 http://hdl.handle.net/11375/23960 en eng Feit, Harvey A. 1978. "Hunting Wildlife and Wage Employment: Resource Use Strategies at Fort George, Quebec." A Report to the Canada Council Research Grants Division. Pp. 10. http://hdl.handle.net/11375/23960 Hunting Strategies Migratory Resources Sedentarized Hunting Jobs and Hunting Ethno-ecology Indigenous Knowledge Subsistence Fort George Chisasibi people James Bay Cree Report 1978 ftmcmaster 2024-06-26T04:35:26Z I want to thank the Chisasibi people of Fort George for their support and for helping me to understand something about how they hunted and used and stewarded their lands. Most of the quantitative records that I used in this research were the result of earlier collaborations of Chisasibi people: with the Native Harvesting Research team (NHR); with research done for the Grand Council of the Crees (GCC) including the Fort George Land Use and Subsistence Economy Study led by Martin Weinstein, and the Fort George Land Use and Occupancy Study led by Alan Penn; and research by Fikret Berkes. I was also assisted by Richard Salisbury who commented on the report. Fort George, Quebec is an unusually large community in the Canadian north, and it provides itself with an unusually high subsistence production for its size. It is also a community with an unusually intense involvement in wage labor. We asked how a substantial level of subsistence production was being maintained, what strategies or models and plans guided hunters. Models developed in an earlier study at a Cree inland community, Waswanipi, were not sufficient to explain Fort George hunting success. Using hunters’ statements about their activities (ethno-models), several different strategies for harvesting resources by season and location were identified. The combination of migratory resources that seasonally pass through Fort George lands, including lands near this coastal settlement, provides access to particularly productive resources for specific periods of time. A key to the limiting conflict between intensive wage labor and subsistence production is the use of the migratory resources and other resources with high biological yields available near the settlement, and the adaptation of work schedules to seasonal migrations. Workers who used this strategy were able to achieve most of the subsistence food production taken by full-time hunters who could range more widely. Hunters with more time were more widely distributed at seasons when migratory game were not ... Report Chisasibi James Bay MacSphere (McMaster University) Chisasibi ENVELOPE(-78.333,-78.333,53.667,53.667) Fort George ENVELOPE(-78.994,-78.994,53.833,53.833) Salisbury ENVELOPE(-153.617,-153.617,-85.633,-85.633)
institution Open Polar
collection MacSphere (McMaster University)
op_collection_id ftmcmaster
language English
topic Hunting Strategies
Migratory Resources
Sedentarized Hunting
Jobs and Hunting
Ethno-ecology
Indigenous Knowledge
Subsistence
Fort George
Chisasibi people
James Bay Cree
spellingShingle Hunting Strategies
Migratory Resources
Sedentarized Hunting
Jobs and Hunting
Ethno-ecology
Indigenous Knowledge
Subsistence
Fort George
Chisasibi people
James Bay Cree
Feit, Harvey
Hunting Wildlife and Wage Employment: Resource Use Strategies at Fort George, Quebec.
topic_facet Hunting Strategies
Migratory Resources
Sedentarized Hunting
Jobs and Hunting
Ethno-ecology
Indigenous Knowledge
Subsistence
Fort George
Chisasibi people
James Bay Cree
description I want to thank the Chisasibi people of Fort George for their support and for helping me to understand something about how they hunted and used and stewarded their lands. Most of the quantitative records that I used in this research were the result of earlier collaborations of Chisasibi people: with the Native Harvesting Research team (NHR); with research done for the Grand Council of the Crees (GCC) including the Fort George Land Use and Subsistence Economy Study led by Martin Weinstein, and the Fort George Land Use and Occupancy Study led by Alan Penn; and research by Fikret Berkes. I was also assisted by Richard Salisbury who commented on the report. Fort George, Quebec is an unusually large community in the Canadian north, and it provides itself with an unusually high subsistence production for its size. It is also a community with an unusually intense involvement in wage labor. We asked how a substantial level of subsistence production was being maintained, what strategies or models and plans guided hunters. Models developed in an earlier study at a Cree inland community, Waswanipi, were not sufficient to explain Fort George hunting success. Using hunters’ statements about their activities (ethno-models), several different strategies for harvesting resources by season and location were identified. The combination of migratory resources that seasonally pass through Fort George lands, including lands near this coastal settlement, provides access to particularly productive resources for specific periods of time. A key to the limiting conflict between intensive wage labor and subsistence production is the use of the migratory resources and other resources with high biological yields available near the settlement, and the adaptation of work schedules to seasonal migrations. Workers who used this strategy were able to achieve most of the subsistence food production taken by full-time hunters who could range more widely. Hunters with more time were more widely distributed at seasons when migratory game were not ...
author2 Anthropology
format Report
author Feit, Harvey
author_facet Feit, Harvey
author_sort Feit, Harvey
title Hunting Wildlife and Wage Employment: Resource Use Strategies at Fort George, Quebec.
title_short Hunting Wildlife and Wage Employment: Resource Use Strategies at Fort George, Quebec.
title_full Hunting Wildlife and Wage Employment: Resource Use Strategies at Fort George, Quebec.
title_fullStr Hunting Wildlife and Wage Employment: Resource Use Strategies at Fort George, Quebec.
title_full_unstemmed Hunting Wildlife and Wage Employment: Resource Use Strategies at Fort George, Quebec.
title_sort hunting wildlife and wage employment: resource use strategies at fort george, quebec.
publishDate 1978
url http://hdl.handle.net/11375/23960
long_lat ENVELOPE(-78.333,-78.333,53.667,53.667)
ENVELOPE(-78.994,-78.994,53.833,53.833)
ENVELOPE(-153.617,-153.617,-85.633,-85.633)
geographic Chisasibi
Fort George
Salisbury
geographic_facet Chisasibi
Fort George
Salisbury
genre Chisasibi
James Bay
genre_facet Chisasibi
James Bay
op_relation Feit, Harvey A. 1978. "Hunting Wildlife and Wage Employment: Resource Use Strategies at Fort George, Quebec." A Report to the Canada Council Research Grants Division. Pp. 10.
http://hdl.handle.net/11375/23960
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