From passive to active dialogue? : Aboriginal lands, development and métissage in Québec, Canada

Over the last decade, northern Québec (Canada) has been the stage of tremendous changes regarding the active role played by Aboriginal peoples in matters of planning and territorial development. This gradual rise, if incomplete, of the Aboriginal agency greatly impacts, as we shall argue here, on th...

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Published in:cultural geographies
Main Authors: Desbiens, Caroline, Rivard, Étienne
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: Sage 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/463
https://doi.org/10.1177/1474474013487485
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author Desbiens, Caroline
Rivard, Étienne
author_facet Desbiens, Caroline
Rivard, Étienne
author_sort Desbiens, Caroline
collection Université Laval: CorpusUL
container_issue 1
container_start_page 99
container_title cultural geographies
container_volume 21
description Over the last decade, northern Québec (Canada) has been the stage of tremendous changes regarding the active role played by Aboriginal peoples in matters of planning and territorial development. This gradual rise, if incomplete, of the Aboriginal agency greatly impacts, as we shall argue here, on the identities and territorialities of both Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal communities, through new policies, legislation, treaty processes, institutions (public or private) devoted to development, territorial governance or the increasing number of cross-cultural partnerships and investments. The goal of this paper is to offer a critical portrait of the recent changes affecting the relations between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal communities in northern Québec, and discuss the limits of the cross-cultural dialogue in which they are engaged. This argument is an attempt to show how development and planning are rich grounds for understanding the state and the economy as ontological. It will be illustrated through the recent emergence of the Québec government’s Plan Nord (‘Northern Plan’), an ambitious program of development, and the treaty process involving three Innu First Nations in the regions of Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean and Côte-Nord. Conceived of as a dynamic form of cross-cultural dialogue shaped by power relations, the concept of métissage (hybridity) grounds our analysis and highlights the challenges of multicultural territorial planning. If Québec is presently engaging in a renewed cross-cultural dialogue with First Nations, the final result of this dialogue, however, remains uncertain.
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spelling ftunivlavalcorp:oai:corpus.ulaval.ca:20.500.11794/463 2025-05-25T13:49:48+00:00 From passive to active dialogue? : Aboriginal lands, development and métissage in Québec, Canada Desbiens, Caroline Rivard, Étienne Nord-du-Québec (Québec) 2016-03-21T19:35:02Z application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/463 https://doi.org/10.1177/1474474013487485 eng eng Sage https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/463 doi:10.1177/1474474013487485 http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_16ec Aménagement du territoire Communication interculturelle Autochtones Autochtones -- Relations avec l'État Utilisation du sol -- Planification article de recherche COAR1_1::Texte::Périodique::Revue::Contribution à un journal::Article::Article de recherche 2016 ftunivlavalcorp https://doi.org/20.500.11794/46310.1177/1474474013487485 2025-04-28T00:28:26Z Over the last decade, northern Québec (Canada) has been the stage of tremendous changes regarding the active role played by Aboriginal peoples in matters of planning and territorial development. This gradual rise, if incomplete, of the Aboriginal agency greatly impacts, as we shall argue here, on the identities and territorialities of both Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal communities, through new policies, legislation, treaty processes, institutions (public or private) devoted to development, territorial governance or the increasing number of cross-cultural partnerships and investments. The goal of this paper is to offer a critical portrait of the recent changes affecting the relations between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal communities in northern Québec, and discuss the limits of the cross-cultural dialogue in which they are engaged. This argument is an attempt to show how development and planning are rich grounds for understanding the state and the economy as ontological. It will be illustrated through the recent emergence of the Québec government’s Plan Nord (‘Northern Plan’), an ambitious program of development, and the treaty process involving three Innu First Nations in the regions of Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean and Côte-Nord. Conceived of as a dynamic form of cross-cultural dialogue shaped by power relations, the concept of métissage (hybridity) grounds our analysis and highlights the challenges of multicultural territorial planning. If Québec is presently engaging in a renewed cross-cultural dialogue with First Nations, the final result of this dialogue, however, remains uncertain. Other/Unknown Material First Nations Université Laval: CorpusUL Canada cultural geographies 21 1 99 114
spellingShingle Aménagement du territoire
Communication interculturelle
Autochtones
Autochtones -- Relations avec l'État
Utilisation du sol -- Planification
Desbiens, Caroline
Rivard, Étienne
From passive to active dialogue? : Aboriginal lands, development and métissage in Québec, Canada
title From passive to active dialogue? : Aboriginal lands, development and métissage in Québec, Canada
title_full From passive to active dialogue? : Aboriginal lands, development and métissage in Québec, Canada
title_fullStr From passive to active dialogue? : Aboriginal lands, development and métissage in Québec, Canada
title_full_unstemmed From passive to active dialogue? : Aboriginal lands, development and métissage in Québec, Canada
title_short From passive to active dialogue? : Aboriginal lands, development and métissage in Québec, Canada
title_sort from passive to active dialogue? : aboriginal lands, development and métissage in québec, canada
topic Aménagement du territoire
Communication interculturelle
Autochtones
Autochtones -- Relations avec l'État
Utilisation du sol -- Planification
topic_facet Aménagement du territoire
Communication interculturelle
Autochtones
Autochtones -- Relations avec l'État
Utilisation du sol -- Planification
url https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/463
https://doi.org/10.1177/1474474013487485