Canadian Inuit use of caribou and Swedish Sámi use of reindeer in entrepreneurship.

The primary objective of this thesis was to develop knowledge and understanding about how traditional resources can be used for entrepreneurship and economic development. This was accomplished by systematically studying how the Canadian Inuit, Swedish Sámi and other indigenous people use Rangifer ta...

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Main Author: Meis Mason, Aldene Helen
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: University of Canterbury. Management and Entrepreneurship 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10092/10804
https://doi.org/10.26021/5603
id ftunivcanter:oai:ir.canterbury.ac.nz:10092/10804
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivcanter:oai:ir.canterbury.ac.nz:10092/10804 2023-05-15T15:56:43+02:00 Canadian Inuit use of caribou and Swedish Sámi use of reindeer in entrepreneurship. Meis Mason, Aldene Helen 2015 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10092/10804 https://doi.org/10.26021/5603 en eng University of Canterbury. Management and Entrepreneurship NZCU http://hdl.handle.net/10092/10804 http://dx.doi.org/10.26021/5603 Copyright Aldene Helen Meis Mason https://canterbury.libguides.com/rights/theses Indigenous entrepreneurship Inuit Sweden Canada community entrepreneurship Sámi caribou reindeer herding Indigenous economic development wild-life traditional resources Theses / Dissertations 2015 ftunivcanter https://doi.org/10.26021/5603 2022-09-08T13:43:33Z The primary objective of this thesis was to develop knowledge and understanding about how traditional resources can be used for entrepreneurship and economic development. This was accomplished by systematically studying how the Canadian Inuit, Swedish Sámi and other indigenous people use Rangifer tarandus for enterprise. The Inuit and Sámi are indigenous circumpolar people living in Canada and Northern Europe for more than 4000 years. Rangifer tarandus known as caribou or tuktu by the Canadian Inuit and reindeer by the Sámi has been a key resource for survival. A literature review was conducted relating 1) to Canadian Inuit, Swedish Sámi and other selected circumpolar indigenous people use of caribou or reindeer for enterprise, and 2) indigenous entrepreneurship, particularly from traditional resources, and how this is affected by context and culture. Research methods included descriptive exploratory comparative cases, participative observation, snowball sampling as well as indigenous research methods. Five field sites were visited: Rankin Inlet and Coral Harbour in Nunavut; Inukjuak in Nunavik, Quebec; Happy Valley-Goose Bay/ North West River in Labrador; and Jokkmokk, in Northern Sweden. The thesis explored: 1) Why are the Inuit hunters of caribou and the Sámi herders of reindeer? 2) What were the products and value-added processing? 3) Why have the Sámi successfully sold their meat and products in the international market while the Inuit have only recently begun to do so? 4) How has their culture and traditional knowledge affected the entrepreneurship including innovation and opportunity recognition? 5) What barriers have they faced and how have these been overcome? 6) How have they measured the success of their enterprises? 7) What can they learn from each other? The findings indicated the Inuit and Sámi uses of caribou and reindeer for enterprise were very different. Context and culture were extremely important. Indigenous people living at similar latitudes and making use of a similar species had very ... Other/Unknown Material Coral Harbour Happy Valley-Goose Bay inuit Inukjuak Jokkmokk North West River Northern Sweden Nunavut Rangifer tarandus Rankin Inlet Sámi Nunavik University of Canterbury, Christchurch: UC Research Repository Canada Coral Harbour ENVELOPE(-83.073,-83.073,64.122,64.122) Happy Valley ENVELOPE(-133.520,-133.520,60.016,60.016) Inukjuak ENVELOPE(-78.101,-78.101,58.455,58.455) Jokkmokk ENVELOPE(20.150,20.150,66.500,66.500) Nunavik Nunavut Rankin Inlet ENVELOPE(-91.983,-91.983,62.734,62.734)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Canterbury, Christchurch: UC Research Repository
op_collection_id ftunivcanter
language English
topic Indigenous entrepreneurship
Inuit
Sweden
Canada
community entrepreneurship
Sámi
caribou
reindeer herding
Indigenous economic development
wild-life
traditional resources
spellingShingle Indigenous entrepreneurship
Inuit
Sweden
Canada
community entrepreneurship
Sámi
caribou
reindeer herding
Indigenous economic development
wild-life
traditional resources
Meis Mason, Aldene Helen
Canadian Inuit use of caribou and Swedish Sámi use of reindeer in entrepreneurship.
topic_facet Indigenous entrepreneurship
Inuit
Sweden
Canada
community entrepreneurship
Sámi
caribou
reindeer herding
Indigenous economic development
wild-life
traditional resources
description The primary objective of this thesis was to develop knowledge and understanding about how traditional resources can be used for entrepreneurship and economic development. This was accomplished by systematically studying how the Canadian Inuit, Swedish Sámi and other indigenous people use Rangifer tarandus for enterprise. The Inuit and Sámi are indigenous circumpolar people living in Canada and Northern Europe for more than 4000 years. Rangifer tarandus known as caribou or tuktu by the Canadian Inuit and reindeer by the Sámi has been a key resource for survival. A literature review was conducted relating 1) to Canadian Inuit, Swedish Sámi and other selected circumpolar indigenous people use of caribou or reindeer for enterprise, and 2) indigenous entrepreneurship, particularly from traditional resources, and how this is affected by context and culture. Research methods included descriptive exploratory comparative cases, participative observation, snowball sampling as well as indigenous research methods. Five field sites were visited: Rankin Inlet and Coral Harbour in Nunavut; Inukjuak in Nunavik, Quebec; Happy Valley-Goose Bay/ North West River in Labrador; and Jokkmokk, in Northern Sweden. The thesis explored: 1) Why are the Inuit hunters of caribou and the Sámi herders of reindeer? 2) What were the products and value-added processing? 3) Why have the Sámi successfully sold their meat and products in the international market while the Inuit have only recently begun to do so? 4) How has their culture and traditional knowledge affected the entrepreneurship including innovation and opportunity recognition? 5) What barriers have they faced and how have these been overcome? 6) How have they measured the success of their enterprises? 7) What can they learn from each other? The findings indicated the Inuit and Sámi uses of caribou and reindeer for enterprise were very different. Context and culture were extremely important. Indigenous people living at similar latitudes and making use of a similar species had very ...
format Other/Unknown Material
author Meis Mason, Aldene Helen
author_facet Meis Mason, Aldene Helen
author_sort Meis Mason, Aldene Helen
title Canadian Inuit use of caribou and Swedish Sámi use of reindeer in entrepreneurship.
title_short Canadian Inuit use of caribou and Swedish Sámi use of reindeer in entrepreneurship.
title_full Canadian Inuit use of caribou and Swedish Sámi use of reindeer in entrepreneurship.
title_fullStr Canadian Inuit use of caribou and Swedish Sámi use of reindeer in entrepreneurship.
title_full_unstemmed Canadian Inuit use of caribou and Swedish Sámi use of reindeer in entrepreneurship.
title_sort canadian inuit use of caribou and swedish sámi use of reindeer in entrepreneurship.
publisher University of Canterbury. Management and Entrepreneurship
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10092/10804
https://doi.org/10.26021/5603
long_lat ENVELOPE(-83.073,-83.073,64.122,64.122)
ENVELOPE(-133.520,-133.520,60.016,60.016)
ENVELOPE(-78.101,-78.101,58.455,58.455)
ENVELOPE(20.150,20.150,66.500,66.500)
ENVELOPE(-91.983,-91.983,62.734,62.734)
geographic Canada
Coral Harbour
Happy Valley
Inukjuak
Jokkmokk
Nunavik
Nunavut
Rankin Inlet
geographic_facet Canada
Coral Harbour
Happy Valley
Inukjuak
Jokkmokk
Nunavik
Nunavut
Rankin Inlet
genre Coral Harbour
Happy Valley-Goose Bay
inuit
Inukjuak
Jokkmokk
North West River
Northern Sweden
Nunavut
Rangifer tarandus
Rankin Inlet
Sámi
Nunavik
genre_facet Coral Harbour
Happy Valley-Goose Bay
inuit
Inukjuak
Jokkmokk
North West River
Northern Sweden
Nunavut
Rangifer tarandus
Rankin Inlet
Sámi
Nunavik
op_relation NZCU
http://hdl.handle.net/10092/10804
http://dx.doi.org/10.26021/5603
op_rights Copyright Aldene Helen Meis Mason
https://canterbury.libguides.com/rights/theses
op_doi https://doi.org/10.26021/5603
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