Indigenous community values and commercial forestry : a case study of Tl'azt'en Nation

Tl'azt'en Nation, a Canadian indigenous community that became an early participant in industrial commercial forestry. In doing so, T'azt'en Nation encountered challenges that reverberate today for indigenous peoples seeking timber rights in Canada. The authors demonstrate that co...

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Other Authors: Booth, Annie L (Annie L. Booth (annie.booth)) (Author), Skelton, Norm (Norm Skelton (norm.skelton)) (Author)
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Natural Resources and Environmental Studies Institute, University of Northern British Columbia 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://unbc.arcabc.ca/islandora/object/unbc%3A65
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spelling ftunbcolumbiadc:oai:unbc.arcabc.ca:unbc_65 2023-10-29T02:36:20+01:00 Indigenous community values and commercial forestry : a case study of Tl'azt'en Nation Booth, Annie L (Annie L. Booth (annie.booth)) (Author) Skelton, Norm (Norm Skelton (norm.skelton)) (Author) 2008-10 https://unbc.arcabc.ca/islandora/object/unbc%3A65 unknown Natural Resources and Environmental Studies Institute, University of Northern British Columbia Occasional paper series (University of Northern British Columbia. Natural Resources and Environmental Studies Institute) no. 3 unbc:65 uuid: 6832641b-cd2a-4fd8-a9a5-f28b6c63c8c0 https://unbc.arcabc.ca/islandora/object/unbc%3A65 "This paper can be downloaded without charge." publisher http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ article Text 2008 ftunbcolumbiadc 2023-10-01T17:46:02Z Tl'azt'en Nation, a Canadian indigenous community that became an early participant in industrial commercial forestry. In doing so, T'azt'en Nation encountered challenges that reverberate today for indigenous peoples seeking timber rights in Canada. The authors demonstrate that considerable tensions exist between traditional First Nations' values and the values of a commercial forestry operation and that finding reconciliation between these different values is not easy. T'azt'en Nation's experiences suggest several key factors for communities to consider and address in undertaking forestry operations that meet indigenous community values and goals, including reconciling commerce with culture, developing better mechanisms for integrating any resource activity with traditional values, improving community engagement, working with community members to ensure expectations are realistic, and ensuring that community politics does not unduly interfere with community economic ventures. Further, forest companies looking to work with First Nations should understand some of the concerns First Nation communities face in planning for community supported forestry operations. Not peer reviewed Article in Journal/Newspaper First Nations UNBC's Digital Institutional Repository (University of Northern British Columbia)
institution Open Polar
collection UNBC's Digital Institutional Repository (University of Northern British Columbia)
op_collection_id ftunbcolumbiadc
language unknown
description Tl'azt'en Nation, a Canadian indigenous community that became an early participant in industrial commercial forestry. In doing so, T'azt'en Nation encountered challenges that reverberate today for indigenous peoples seeking timber rights in Canada. The authors demonstrate that considerable tensions exist between traditional First Nations' values and the values of a commercial forestry operation and that finding reconciliation between these different values is not easy. T'azt'en Nation's experiences suggest several key factors for communities to consider and address in undertaking forestry operations that meet indigenous community values and goals, including reconciling commerce with culture, developing better mechanisms for integrating any resource activity with traditional values, improving community engagement, working with community members to ensure expectations are realistic, and ensuring that community politics does not unduly interfere with community economic ventures. Further, forest companies looking to work with First Nations should understand some of the concerns First Nation communities face in planning for community supported forestry operations. Not peer reviewed
author2 Booth, Annie L (Annie L. Booth (annie.booth)) (Author)
Skelton, Norm (Norm Skelton (norm.skelton)) (Author)
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
title Indigenous community values and commercial forestry : a case study of Tl'azt'en Nation
spellingShingle Indigenous community values and commercial forestry : a case study of Tl'azt'en Nation
title_short Indigenous community values and commercial forestry : a case study of Tl'azt'en Nation
title_full Indigenous community values and commercial forestry : a case study of Tl'azt'en Nation
title_fullStr Indigenous community values and commercial forestry : a case study of Tl'azt'en Nation
title_full_unstemmed Indigenous community values and commercial forestry : a case study of Tl'azt'en Nation
title_sort indigenous community values and commercial forestry : a case study of tl'azt'en nation
publisher Natural Resources and Environmental Studies Institute, University of Northern British Columbia
publishDate 2008
url https://unbc.arcabc.ca/islandora/object/unbc%3A65
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation Occasional paper series (University of Northern British Columbia. Natural Resources and Environmental Studies Institute)
no. 3
unbc:65
uuid: 6832641b-cd2a-4fd8-a9a5-f28b6c63c8c0
https://unbc.arcabc.ca/islandora/object/unbc%3A65
op_rights "This paper can be downloaded without charge."
publisher
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
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