Inuit culture and opportunity recognition for commercial caribou harvests in the bio economy

Purpose - This case study aims to explore the affect of Canadian Inuit culture on recognizing opportunities from caribou when participating in the bio economy and decision making and benefit sharing considerations for Inuit partnerships arsing from the northern bioeconomy. Design/methodology/approac...

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Main Authors: Aldene H. Meis Mason, Robert B. Anderson, Leo-Paul Dana
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.emeraldinsight.com/10.1108/17506201211258388?utm_campaign=RePEc&WT.mc_id=RePEc
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spelling ftrepec:oai:RePEc:eme:jecpps:v:6:y:2012:i:3:p:194-212 2024-04-14T08:13:58+00:00 Inuit culture and opportunity recognition for commercial caribou harvests in the bio economy Aldene H. Meis Mason Robert B. Anderson Leo-Paul Dana http://www.emeraldinsight.com/10.1108/17506201211258388?utm_campaign=RePEc&WT.mc_id=RePEc unknown http://www.emeraldinsight.com/10.1108/17506201211258388?utm_campaign=RePEc&WT.mc_id=RePEc article ftrepec 2024-03-19T10:30:38Z Purpose - This case study aims to explore the affect of Canadian Inuit culture on recognizing opportunities from caribou when participating in the bio economy and decision making and benefit sharing considerations for Inuit partnerships arsing from the northern bioeconomy. Design/methodology/approach - This Inuit case study in northern Canada combined Elder interviews, a focus group and product elicitation techniques. First, the Inuit identified traditional uses of caribou for health care. Second, they explored its potential uses for biomedicines, nutraceuticals and functional foods. Third, they discussed partnerships for development and benefits that should result. Findings - Inuit had the right to develop and sell caribou products. Decisions about products and processes should be up to the community. Ensuring food security was critical. They preferred partnering with Inuit and northern businesses and government. University and business partnerships needed to provide ongoing monetary and non-monetary benefits such as employment, new skills and knowledge, and networks. Research limitations/implications - Conclusions based on one case study need to be confirmed by surveying other Inuit communities. Future research should also include Inuit youth. Practical implications - This research provides an increased understanding of the commons, the use of traditional resources, food security and the interaction of Indigenous culture on opportunity recognition for policy makers, businesses, indigenous communities, and university researchers. Originality/value - This research paper integrates commons, indigenous entrepreneurship, opportunity recognition and bioeconomy. Furthermore, it provides the Inuit with a voice which they feel has been lacking in the business literature. Indigenous entrepreneurship, Culture, Northern Canada, Inuit, Commercial caribou, Opportunity recognition, Innovation, Bio economy, Entrepreneurialism Article in Journal/Newspaper inuit RePEc (Research Papers in Economics) Canada
institution Open Polar
collection RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
op_collection_id ftrepec
language unknown
description Purpose - This case study aims to explore the affect of Canadian Inuit culture on recognizing opportunities from caribou when participating in the bio economy and decision making and benefit sharing considerations for Inuit partnerships arsing from the northern bioeconomy. Design/methodology/approach - This Inuit case study in northern Canada combined Elder interviews, a focus group and product elicitation techniques. First, the Inuit identified traditional uses of caribou for health care. Second, they explored its potential uses for biomedicines, nutraceuticals and functional foods. Third, they discussed partnerships for development and benefits that should result. Findings - Inuit had the right to develop and sell caribou products. Decisions about products and processes should be up to the community. Ensuring food security was critical. They preferred partnering with Inuit and northern businesses and government. University and business partnerships needed to provide ongoing monetary and non-monetary benefits such as employment, new skills and knowledge, and networks. Research limitations/implications - Conclusions based on one case study need to be confirmed by surveying other Inuit communities. Future research should also include Inuit youth. Practical implications - This research provides an increased understanding of the commons, the use of traditional resources, food security and the interaction of Indigenous culture on opportunity recognition for policy makers, businesses, indigenous communities, and university researchers. Originality/value - This research paper integrates commons, indigenous entrepreneurship, opportunity recognition and bioeconomy. Furthermore, it provides the Inuit with a voice which they feel has been lacking in the business literature. Indigenous entrepreneurship, Culture, Northern Canada, Inuit, Commercial caribou, Opportunity recognition, Innovation, Bio economy, Entrepreneurialism
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Aldene H. Meis Mason
Robert B. Anderson
Leo-Paul Dana
spellingShingle Aldene H. Meis Mason
Robert B. Anderson
Leo-Paul Dana
Inuit culture and opportunity recognition for commercial caribou harvests in the bio economy
author_facet Aldene H. Meis Mason
Robert B. Anderson
Leo-Paul Dana
author_sort Aldene H. Meis Mason
title Inuit culture and opportunity recognition for commercial caribou harvests in the bio economy
title_short Inuit culture and opportunity recognition for commercial caribou harvests in the bio economy
title_full Inuit culture and opportunity recognition for commercial caribou harvests in the bio economy
title_fullStr Inuit culture and opportunity recognition for commercial caribou harvests in the bio economy
title_full_unstemmed Inuit culture and opportunity recognition for commercial caribou harvests in the bio economy
title_sort inuit culture and opportunity recognition for commercial caribou harvests in the bio economy
url http://www.emeraldinsight.com/10.1108/17506201211258388?utm_campaign=RePEc&WT.mc_id=RePEc
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre inuit
genre_facet inuit
op_relation http://www.emeraldinsight.com/10.1108/17506201211258388?utm_campaign=RePEc&WT.mc_id=RePEc
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