Cultural Keystone Species as a Pathway for Indigenous-led, Biocultural Stewardship of Land and Lifeways

Cultural Keystone Species (CKS) have often been described in contexts related to Indigenous-led, biocultural conservation of wild species, yet very little research has explored questions around the benefits, challenges, and opportunities of Indigenous-led governance of CKS. In this thesis, I explore...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lukawiecki, Jessica
Other Authors: Moola, Faisal
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Guelph 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10214/28383
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spelling ftunivguelph:oai:atrium.lib.uoguelph.ca:10214/28383 2024-09-15T18:20:17+00:00 Cultural Keystone Species as a Pathway for Indigenous-led, Biocultural Stewardship of Land and Lifeways Lukawiecki, Jessica Moola, Faisal 2024-02-27 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/10214/28383 en eng University of Guelph Lukawiecki, J., Wall, J., Young, R., Gonet, J., Azhdari, G., & Moola, F. (2022). Operationalizing the biocultural perspective in conservation practice: A systematic review of the literature. Environmental Science & Policy, 136, 369–376. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envsci.2022.06.016 https://hdl.handle.net/10214/28383 All items in the Atrium are protected by copyright with all rights reserved unless otherwise indicated. Cultural Keystone Species Indigenous-led Conservation Canadian environmental policy endangered species Canadian Species at Risk Act wild species Thesis 2024 ftunivguelph 2024-07-30T23:43:48Z Cultural Keystone Species (CKS) have often been described in contexts related to Indigenous-led, biocultural conservation of wild species, yet very little research has explored questions around the benefits, challenges, and opportunities of Indigenous-led governance of CKS. In this thesis, I explore the foundations of the CKS concept, through conducting a scoping review of the literature, in-depth interviews with Indigenous Guardians and knowledge holders across Canada, and a collaborative case study with Miawpukek First Nation in South-Central Newfoundland. I explore some of the challenges with and opportunities for implementing the CKS concept in practice. I conduct an in-depth policy analysis of the Canadian Species at Risk Act and find that the majority of identified CKS have no form of protection under this key piece of endangered species legislation, demonstrating vulnerabilities of endangered species legislation in Canada for Indigenous Peoples. I work with Miawpukek First Nation to identify a suite of biocultural processes that set the context for the resurgent, Indigenous-led governance of CKS. Fundamentally, I argue that CKS as a biocultural approach to conservation can help to reconcile or reform existing colonial environmental policies and conventions, like the SARA and the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework. In a parallel process, I also argue that the resurgence of Indigenous-led stewardship of CKS is critical to reestablishing healthy relationships to wild species and to conserving these species at levels of abundance that are meaningful to Indigenous Peoples given their inherent rights to hunt, fish, and harvest. I argue that reconciliation and resurgence in the context of CKS can function in parallel, complementary pathways that on the one hand seek to reform existing state policies, and on the other hand seek to amplify Indigenous-led stewardship, governance, and laws for CKS. Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council Environment and Climate Change Canada Thesis Newfoundland University of Guelph: DSpace digital archive
institution Open Polar
collection University of Guelph: DSpace digital archive
op_collection_id ftunivguelph
language English
topic Cultural Keystone Species
Indigenous-led Conservation
Canadian environmental policy
endangered species
Canadian Species at Risk Act
wild species
spellingShingle Cultural Keystone Species
Indigenous-led Conservation
Canadian environmental policy
endangered species
Canadian Species at Risk Act
wild species
Lukawiecki, Jessica
Cultural Keystone Species as a Pathway for Indigenous-led, Biocultural Stewardship of Land and Lifeways
topic_facet Cultural Keystone Species
Indigenous-led Conservation
Canadian environmental policy
endangered species
Canadian Species at Risk Act
wild species
description Cultural Keystone Species (CKS) have often been described in contexts related to Indigenous-led, biocultural conservation of wild species, yet very little research has explored questions around the benefits, challenges, and opportunities of Indigenous-led governance of CKS. In this thesis, I explore the foundations of the CKS concept, through conducting a scoping review of the literature, in-depth interviews with Indigenous Guardians and knowledge holders across Canada, and a collaborative case study with Miawpukek First Nation in South-Central Newfoundland. I explore some of the challenges with and opportunities for implementing the CKS concept in practice. I conduct an in-depth policy analysis of the Canadian Species at Risk Act and find that the majority of identified CKS have no form of protection under this key piece of endangered species legislation, demonstrating vulnerabilities of endangered species legislation in Canada for Indigenous Peoples. I work with Miawpukek First Nation to identify a suite of biocultural processes that set the context for the resurgent, Indigenous-led governance of CKS. Fundamentally, I argue that CKS as a biocultural approach to conservation can help to reconcile or reform existing colonial environmental policies and conventions, like the SARA and the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework. In a parallel process, I also argue that the resurgence of Indigenous-led stewardship of CKS is critical to reestablishing healthy relationships to wild species and to conserving these species at levels of abundance that are meaningful to Indigenous Peoples given their inherent rights to hunt, fish, and harvest. I argue that reconciliation and resurgence in the context of CKS can function in parallel, complementary pathways that on the one hand seek to reform existing state policies, and on the other hand seek to amplify Indigenous-led stewardship, governance, and laws for CKS. Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council Environment and Climate Change Canada
author2 Moola, Faisal
format Thesis
author Lukawiecki, Jessica
author_facet Lukawiecki, Jessica
author_sort Lukawiecki, Jessica
title Cultural Keystone Species as a Pathway for Indigenous-led, Biocultural Stewardship of Land and Lifeways
title_short Cultural Keystone Species as a Pathway for Indigenous-led, Biocultural Stewardship of Land and Lifeways
title_full Cultural Keystone Species as a Pathway for Indigenous-led, Biocultural Stewardship of Land and Lifeways
title_fullStr Cultural Keystone Species as a Pathway for Indigenous-led, Biocultural Stewardship of Land and Lifeways
title_full_unstemmed Cultural Keystone Species as a Pathway for Indigenous-led, Biocultural Stewardship of Land and Lifeways
title_sort cultural keystone species as a pathway for indigenous-led, biocultural stewardship of land and lifeways
publisher University of Guelph
publishDate 2024
url https://hdl.handle.net/10214/28383
genre Newfoundland
genre_facet Newfoundland
op_relation Lukawiecki, J., Wall, J., Young, R., Gonet, J., Azhdari, G., & Moola, F. (2022). Operationalizing the biocultural perspective in conservation practice: A systematic review of the literature. Environmental Science & Policy, 136, 369–376. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envsci.2022.06.016
https://hdl.handle.net/10214/28383
op_rights All items in the Atrium are protected by copyright with all rights reserved unless otherwise indicated.
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