Mobilisation de la Nature en territoires autochtones : comparaison entre le Sapmi (Suède) et Eeyou Istchee (Canada)

The Sápmi (traditional territory of the Sami of Sweden) and Eeyou Istchee (traditional territory of the Cree or Eenouch of north-eastern Canada) have been contested territories for several decades in the face of an hegemonic definition of "Nature" and its legitimized practices imposed by t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Maraud, Simon
Other Authors: Desbiens, Caroline, Guyot, Sylvain
Format: Thesis
Language:French
Published: Université Laval 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/40189
id fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/40189
record_format openpolar
spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/40189 2023-05-15T17:06:38+02:00 Mobilisation de la Nature en territoires autochtones : comparaison entre le Sapmi (Suède) et Eeyou Istchee (Canada) Mobilising Nature in Indigenous Territories: comparison between Sapmi (Sweden) and Eeyou Istchee (Canada) Maraud, Simon Desbiens, Caroline Guyot, Sylvain 2020-01-01 https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/40189 fr fre Université Laval http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/40189 other CorpusUL scipo demo Thesis https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_46ec/ 2020 fttriple https://doi.org/20.500.11794/40189 2023-01-22T17:24:21Z The Sápmi (traditional territory of the Sami of Sweden) and Eeyou Istchee (traditional territory of the Cree or Eenouch of north-eastern Canada) have been contested territories for several decades in the face of an hegemonic definition of "Nature" and its legitimized practices imposed by the Quebec (and Canadian) and Swedish states. In the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries, these two "Norths" became open laboratories for the integration of Aboriginal peoples in the governance of their territories. The thesis argues that protection of Nature has allowed the creation of new arenas in which reconfigurations of power structures might take place, thus leaving more room for Sami and Cree values and territorialities. This thesis analyzes the reappropriation of the management of protected areas in these territories in order to understand the stakes and the compromises involved. Two case studies are at the heart of this research: the UNESCO World Heritage Site of Laponia (Sweden) and the Quebec National Park of Assinica (under creation). The context of development in which the involvement of indigenous peoples in protected areas management takes place greatly complicates the process. The two case studies allow us to investigate the accession to natural resource management structures - from which the indigenous groups were previously excluded - and to reflect on the possible new forms of governance that are emerging from this accession. It is a question of understanding the relations of dominations which take place in the decolonization of these spaces of protection of Nature, and their influences on the possible structural transformations which emerge. Thèse en cotutelle Université Laval et Université de Limoges Le Sápmi (territoire traditionnel des Samis) et Eeyou Istchee (territoire traditionnel des Cris ou Eenouch) sont depuis plusieurs décennies des espaces de contestations qui se confrontent à la définition hégémonique de la Nature et des pratiques légitimes de l'environnement, imposée par les ... Thesis Laponia sami Sapmi Cris Unknown Canada
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id fttriple
language French
topic scipo
demo
spellingShingle scipo
demo
Maraud, Simon
Mobilisation de la Nature en territoires autochtones : comparaison entre le Sapmi (Suède) et Eeyou Istchee (Canada)
topic_facet scipo
demo
description The Sápmi (traditional territory of the Sami of Sweden) and Eeyou Istchee (traditional territory of the Cree or Eenouch of north-eastern Canada) have been contested territories for several decades in the face of an hegemonic definition of "Nature" and its legitimized practices imposed by the Quebec (and Canadian) and Swedish states. In the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries, these two "Norths" became open laboratories for the integration of Aboriginal peoples in the governance of their territories. The thesis argues that protection of Nature has allowed the creation of new arenas in which reconfigurations of power structures might take place, thus leaving more room for Sami and Cree values and territorialities. This thesis analyzes the reappropriation of the management of protected areas in these territories in order to understand the stakes and the compromises involved. Two case studies are at the heart of this research: the UNESCO World Heritage Site of Laponia (Sweden) and the Quebec National Park of Assinica (under creation). The context of development in which the involvement of indigenous peoples in protected areas management takes place greatly complicates the process. The two case studies allow us to investigate the accession to natural resource management structures - from which the indigenous groups were previously excluded - and to reflect on the possible new forms of governance that are emerging from this accession. It is a question of understanding the relations of dominations which take place in the decolonization of these spaces of protection of Nature, and their influences on the possible structural transformations which emerge. Thèse en cotutelle Université Laval et Université de Limoges Le Sápmi (territoire traditionnel des Samis) et Eeyou Istchee (territoire traditionnel des Cris ou Eenouch) sont depuis plusieurs décennies des espaces de contestations qui se confrontent à la définition hégémonique de la Nature et des pratiques légitimes de l'environnement, imposée par les ...
author2 Desbiens, Caroline
Guyot, Sylvain
format Thesis
author Maraud, Simon
author_facet Maraud, Simon
author_sort Maraud, Simon
title Mobilisation de la Nature en territoires autochtones : comparaison entre le Sapmi (Suède) et Eeyou Istchee (Canada)
title_short Mobilisation de la Nature en territoires autochtones : comparaison entre le Sapmi (Suède) et Eeyou Istchee (Canada)
title_full Mobilisation de la Nature en territoires autochtones : comparaison entre le Sapmi (Suède) et Eeyou Istchee (Canada)
title_fullStr Mobilisation de la Nature en territoires autochtones : comparaison entre le Sapmi (Suède) et Eeyou Istchee (Canada)
title_full_unstemmed Mobilisation de la Nature en territoires autochtones : comparaison entre le Sapmi (Suède) et Eeyou Istchee (Canada)
title_sort mobilisation de la nature en territoires autochtones : comparaison entre le sapmi (suède) et eeyou istchee (canada)
publisher Université Laval
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/40189
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre Laponia
sami
Sapmi
Cris
genre_facet Laponia
sami
Sapmi
Cris
op_source CorpusUL
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/40189
op_rights other
op_doi https://doi.org/20.500.11794/40189
_version_ 1766061786449051648