Uncommon Waters: Intercultural Conflict over the Atlantic Salmon of the Restigouche Watershed

In a 10-year participatory case study of conflicted communities, the author describes the historical, social, economic, rural and legal contexts of their conflict in relation to the survival of their Indigenous and non-Indigenous cultures and of the Atlantic salmon, each of which is in jeopardy of e...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Booth, Stephen P
Other Authors: FitzGibbon, John
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Guelph 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10214/15615
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spelling ftunivguelph:oai:atrium.lib.uoguelph.ca:10214/15615 2024-09-15T17:55:56+00:00 Uncommon Waters: Intercultural Conflict over the Atlantic Salmon of the Restigouche Watershed Booth, Stephen P FitzGibbon, John 2019-03-08 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10214/15615 en eng University of Guelph http://hdl.handle.net/10214/15615 All items in the Atrium are protected by copyright with all rights reserved unless otherwise indicated. Case study Participatory Intercultural conflict Cultural and species survival Indigenous Non-indigenous Settler Non-resident riparian-rights owners and leasees Rights Colonial Conservation Atlantic salmon Reconciliation Epistemology and ontology Thesis 2019 ftunivguelph 2024-08-20T23:47:41Z In a 10-year participatory case study of conflicted communities, the author describes the historical, social, economic, rural and legal contexts of their conflict in relation to the survival of their Indigenous and non-Indigenous cultures and of the Atlantic salmon, each of which is in jeopardy of extinction. A thick description of the communities in relation to one another and to their place, Listuguj First Nation, Gespe’gewaq, Mi’gmaqi; the Restigouche watershed of northern New Brunswick and the Gaspé, and to the Atlantic salmon on which they depend, was constructed through semi-structured interviews with representative members of each community, together with long-term attendance at salmon-centred community events, ranging from scientific to ceremonial and trust-and-relationship-building informal conversations, supported an iterative methodology designed to honour Indigenous knowledge and methods. Theories of social learning, social capital, bridging, and bonding have been applied to the thick description, revealing a combination of socio-economic-political and epistemological-ontological differences between Indigenous and non-Indigenous rights and stakeholders to be central to continuing conflict and failure to resolve what is understood by non-Indigenous groups as “natural-resource management” for “conservation” and to continuing Indigenous resistance to scientific management. In the current context of unresolved issues of territory, consent, reconciliation, cooperation, and collaboration between Canada’s First Nations and its federal and provincial governments, this case study provides insights into necessary pre-conditions for their resolution. Thesis Atlantic salmon First Nations University of Guelph: DSpace digital archive
institution Open Polar
collection University of Guelph: DSpace digital archive
op_collection_id ftunivguelph
language English
topic Case study
Participatory
Intercultural conflict
Cultural and species survival
Indigenous
Non-indigenous
Settler
Non-resident riparian-rights owners and leasees
Rights
Colonial
Conservation
Atlantic salmon
Reconciliation
Epistemology and ontology
spellingShingle Case study
Participatory
Intercultural conflict
Cultural and species survival
Indigenous
Non-indigenous
Settler
Non-resident riparian-rights owners and leasees
Rights
Colonial
Conservation
Atlantic salmon
Reconciliation
Epistemology and ontology
Booth, Stephen P
Uncommon Waters: Intercultural Conflict over the Atlantic Salmon of the Restigouche Watershed
topic_facet Case study
Participatory
Intercultural conflict
Cultural and species survival
Indigenous
Non-indigenous
Settler
Non-resident riparian-rights owners and leasees
Rights
Colonial
Conservation
Atlantic salmon
Reconciliation
Epistemology and ontology
description In a 10-year participatory case study of conflicted communities, the author describes the historical, social, economic, rural and legal contexts of their conflict in relation to the survival of their Indigenous and non-Indigenous cultures and of the Atlantic salmon, each of which is in jeopardy of extinction. A thick description of the communities in relation to one another and to their place, Listuguj First Nation, Gespe’gewaq, Mi’gmaqi; the Restigouche watershed of northern New Brunswick and the Gaspé, and to the Atlantic salmon on which they depend, was constructed through semi-structured interviews with representative members of each community, together with long-term attendance at salmon-centred community events, ranging from scientific to ceremonial and trust-and-relationship-building informal conversations, supported an iterative methodology designed to honour Indigenous knowledge and methods. Theories of social learning, social capital, bridging, and bonding have been applied to the thick description, revealing a combination of socio-economic-political and epistemological-ontological differences between Indigenous and non-Indigenous rights and stakeholders to be central to continuing conflict and failure to resolve what is understood by non-Indigenous groups as “natural-resource management” for “conservation” and to continuing Indigenous resistance to scientific management. In the current context of unresolved issues of territory, consent, reconciliation, cooperation, and collaboration between Canada’s First Nations and its federal and provincial governments, this case study provides insights into necessary pre-conditions for their resolution.
author2 FitzGibbon, John
format Thesis
author Booth, Stephen P
author_facet Booth, Stephen P
author_sort Booth, Stephen P
title Uncommon Waters: Intercultural Conflict over the Atlantic Salmon of the Restigouche Watershed
title_short Uncommon Waters: Intercultural Conflict over the Atlantic Salmon of the Restigouche Watershed
title_full Uncommon Waters: Intercultural Conflict over the Atlantic Salmon of the Restigouche Watershed
title_fullStr Uncommon Waters: Intercultural Conflict over the Atlantic Salmon of the Restigouche Watershed
title_full_unstemmed Uncommon Waters: Intercultural Conflict over the Atlantic Salmon of the Restigouche Watershed
title_sort uncommon waters: intercultural conflict over the atlantic salmon of the restigouche watershed
publisher University of Guelph
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10214/15615
genre Atlantic salmon
First Nations
genre_facet Atlantic salmon
First Nations
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10214/15615
op_rights All items in the Atrium are protected by copyright with all rights reserved unless otherwise indicated.
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