Literature Review Local and Traditional Knowledge In the Athabasca River Watershed

Given the limits of resources and time established for this project, this report should not be considered a comprehensive overview of all available documented Traditional Knowledge for this watershed. The Athabasca River Watershed comprises both Treaty #8 and Treaty #6. There are at least nine Abori...

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Main Author: Parlee, Brenda; D'Souza, Amabel
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.7939/r3-7120-vn97
https://era.library.ualberta.ca/items/4aba2930-3663-4ad8-bba3-75b99069aa60
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spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:10670/1.mag2lp 2023-05-15T15:26:01+02:00 Literature Review Local and Traditional Knowledge In the Athabasca River Watershed Parlee, Brenda; D'Souza, Amabel 2019-06-01 https://doi.org/10.7939/r3-7120-vn97 https://era.library.ualberta.ca/items/4aba2930-3663-4ad8-bba3-75b99069aa60 en eng doi:10.7939/r3-7120-vn97 10670/1.mag2lp https://era.library.ualberta.ca/items/4aba2930-3663-4ad8-bba3-75b99069aa60 lic_creative-commons ERA : Education and Research Archive info droit Other https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_1843/ 2019 fttriple https://doi.org/10.7939/r3-7120-vn97 2023-01-22T18:28:15Z Given the limits of resources and time established for this project, this report should not be considered a comprehensive overview of all available documented Traditional Knowledge for this watershed. The Athabasca River Watershed comprises both Treaty #8 and Treaty #6. There are at least nine Aboriginal groups with historic or contemporary connections to this watershed. Many of these groups relocated to British Columbia with the settlement of Alberta in the 19th century. Definitions, methods, and formats of documented Traditional Knowledge vary significantly. While libraries, the internet, and scholarly journals house some sources of knowledge, there are many kinds of reports prepared by and for Aboriginal communities that are not available to the public for political, cultural, and socio-economic reasons. There are many kinds of Traditional Knowledge indicators of ecosystem health and ecological change; some of these indicators are synergistic with Western Science. Other kinds of indicators are unique to Traditional Knowledge and may be difficult to integrate into a standardized ‘State of the Watershed Report.’ There is significant spatial differentiation related to where such knowledge is documented; some communities in the lower Athabasca have been more active in documenting Traditional Knowledge due, in part, to the resources and pressures to do so that have come with planning, assessment, and monitoring of oil sands mining and its impacts. Other/Unknown Material Athabasca River Unknown Athabasca River
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topic info
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Parlee, Brenda; D'Souza, Amabel
Literature Review Local and Traditional Knowledge In the Athabasca River Watershed
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description Given the limits of resources and time established for this project, this report should not be considered a comprehensive overview of all available documented Traditional Knowledge for this watershed. The Athabasca River Watershed comprises both Treaty #8 and Treaty #6. There are at least nine Aboriginal groups with historic or contemporary connections to this watershed. Many of these groups relocated to British Columbia with the settlement of Alberta in the 19th century. Definitions, methods, and formats of documented Traditional Knowledge vary significantly. While libraries, the internet, and scholarly journals house some sources of knowledge, there are many kinds of reports prepared by and for Aboriginal communities that are not available to the public for political, cultural, and socio-economic reasons. There are many kinds of Traditional Knowledge indicators of ecosystem health and ecological change; some of these indicators are synergistic with Western Science. Other kinds of indicators are unique to Traditional Knowledge and may be difficult to integrate into a standardized ‘State of the Watershed Report.’ There is significant spatial differentiation related to where such knowledge is documented; some communities in the lower Athabasca have been more active in documenting Traditional Knowledge due, in part, to the resources and pressures to do so that have come with planning, assessment, and monitoring of oil sands mining and its impacts.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Parlee, Brenda; D'Souza, Amabel
author_facet Parlee, Brenda; D'Souza, Amabel
author_sort Parlee, Brenda; D'Souza, Amabel
title Literature Review Local and Traditional Knowledge In the Athabasca River Watershed
title_short Literature Review Local and Traditional Knowledge In the Athabasca River Watershed
title_full Literature Review Local and Traditional Knowledge In the Athabasca River Watershed
title_fullStr Literature Review Local and Traditional Knowledge In the Athabasca River Watershed
title_full_unstemmed Literature Review Local and Traditional Knowledge In the Athabasca River Watershed
title_sort literature review local and traditional knowledge in the athabasca river watershed
publishDate 2019
url https://doi.org/10.7939/r3-7120-vn97
https://era.library.ualberta.ca/items/4aba2930-3663-4ad8-bba3-75b99069aa60
geographic Athabasca River
geographic_facet Athabasca River
genre Athabasca River
genre_facet Athabasca River
op_source ERA : Education and Research Archive
op_relation doi:10.7939/r3-7120-vn97
10670/1.mag2lp
https://era.library.ualberta.ca/items/4aba2930-3663-4ad8-bba3-75b99069aa60
op_rights lic_creative-commons
op_doi https://doi.org/10.7939/r3-7120-vn97
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