Remembering Our Relations

Wood Buffalo National Park is located in the heart of Dënesųłıné homelands, where Dene people have lived from time immemorial. Central to the creation, expansion, and management of this park, Canada’s largest at nearly 45, 000 square kilometers, was the eviction of Dënesųłıné people from their...

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Main Authors: Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation, Trimble, Sabina, Fortna, Peter
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: University of Calgary Press 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1880/117796
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spelling ftunivcalgary:oai:prism.ucalgary.ca:1880/117796 2024-01-21T10:11:07+01:00 Remembering Our Relations Dënesųłıné Oral Histories of Wood Buffalo National Park Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation Trimble, Sabina Fortna, Peter 2023-12-22 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/1880/117796 en eng University of Calgary Press University of Calgary http://press.ucalgary.ca/ 9781773854137 https://hdl.handle.net/1880/117796 This open-access work is published under a Creative Commons licence. This means that you are free to copy, distribute, display or perform the work as long as you clearly attribute the work to its authors and publisher, that you do not use this work for any commercial gain in any form, and that you in no way alter, transform, or build on the work outside of its use in normal academic scholarship without our express permission. If you want to reuse or distribute the work, you must inform its new audience of the licence terms of this work. For more information, see details of the Creative Commons licence at: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ book 2023 ftunivcalgary 2023-12-24T18:44:14Z Wood Buffalo National Park is located in the heart of Dënesųłıné homelands, where Dene people have lived from time immemorial. Central to the creation, expansion, and management of this park, Canada’s largest at nearly 45, 000 square kilometers, was the eviction of Dënesųłıné people from their home, the forced separation of Dene families, and restriction of their Treaty rights. Remembering Our Relations tells the history of Wood Buffalo National Park from a Dene perspective and within the context of Treaty 8. Oral history and testimony from Dene Elders, knowledge-holders, leaders, and community members place Dënesųłıné voices first. With supporting archival research, this book demonstrates how the founding, expansion, and management of Wood Buffalo National Park fits into a wider pattern of promises broken by settler colonial governments managing land use throughout the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. By prioritizing Dënesųłıné histories Remembering Our Relations deliberately challenges how Dene experiences have been erased, and how this erasure has been used to justify violence against Dënesųłıné homelands and people. Amplifying the voices and lives of the past, present, and future, Remembering Our Relations is a crucial step in the journey for healing and justice Dënesųłıné peoples have been pursuing for over a century. Book Wood Buffalo Wood Buffalo National Park PRISM - University of Calgary Digital Repository Wood Buffalo ENVELOPE(-112.007,-112.007,57.664,57.664)
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collection PRISM - University of Calgary Digital Repository
op_collection_id ftunivcalgary
language English
description Wood Buffalo National Park is located in the heart of Dënesųłıné homelands, where Dene people have lived from time immemorial. Central to the creation, expansion, and management of this park, Canada’s largest at nearly 45, 000 square kilometers, was the eviction of Dënesųłıné people from their home, the forced separation of Dene families, and restriction of their Treaty rights. Remembering Our Relations tells the history of Wood Buffalo National Park from a Dene perspective and within the context of Treaty 8. Oral history and testimony from Dene Elders, knowledge-holders, leaders, and community members place Dënesųłıné voices first. With supporting archival research, this book demonstrates how the founding, expansion, and management of Wood Buffalo National Park fits into a wider pattern of promises broken by settler colonial governments managing land use throughout the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. By prioritizing Dënesųłıné histories Remembering Our Relations deliberately challenges how Dene experiences have been erased, and how this erasure has been used to justify violence against Dënesųłıné homelands and people. Amplifying the voices and lives of the past, present, and future, Remembering Our Relations is a crucial step in the journey for healing and justice Dënesųłıné peoples have been pursuing for over a century.
format Book
author Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation
Trimble, Sabina
Fortna, Peter
spellingShingle Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation
Trimble, Sabina
Fortna, Peter
Remembering Our Relations
author_facet Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation
Trimble, Sabina
Fortna, Peter
author_sort Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation
title Remembering Our Relations
title_short Remembering Our Relations
title_full Remembering Our Relations
title_fullStr Remembering Our Relations
title_full_unstemmed Remembering Our Relations
title_sort remembering our relations
publisher University of Calgary Press
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/1880/117796
long_lat ENVELOPE(-112.007,-112.007,57.664,57.664)
geographic Wood Buffalo
geographic_facet Wood Buffalo
genre Wood Buffalo
Wood Buffalo National Park
genre_facet Wood Buffalo
Wood Buffalo National Park
op_relation 9781773854137
https://hdl.handle.net/1880/117796
op_rights This open-access work is published under a Creative Commons licence. This means that you are free to copy, distribute, display or perform the work as long as you clearly attribute the work to its authors and publisher, that you do not use this work for any commercial gain in any form, and that you in no way alter, transform, or build on the work outside of its use in normal academic scholarship without our express permission. If you want to reuse or distribute the work, you must inform its new audience of the licence terms of this work. For more information, see details of the Creative Commons licence at: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
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