Policy Lessons and Indigenous Governance: Providing a Basis for a Successful Salmon Reintroduction Framework in the Upper Columbia River

Since the construction of the Grand Coulee Dam on the Columbia River in the mid 1900s, the passage of anadromous salmon to the Upper Columbia River Basin has been completely hindered. Studies have determined that there remains viable habitat for these species of salmon in the Upper Columbia which co...

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Main Author: Dufort, Alexandra
Other Authors: Marschke, Melissa
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/44871
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spelling ftunivottawa:oai:ruor.uottawa.ca:10393/44871 2023-06-11T04:11:43+02:00 Policy Lessons and Indigenous Governance: Providing a Basis for a Successful Salmon Reintroduction Framework in the Upper Columbia River Dufort, Alexandra Marschke, Melissa 2023 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10393/44871 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/10393/44871 Research Paper 2023 ftunivottawa 2023-05-06T22:59:12Z Since the construction of the Grand Coulee Dam on the Columbia River in the mid 1900s, the passage of anadromous salmon to the Upper Columbia River Basin has been completely hindered. Studies have determined that there remains viable habitat for these species of salmon in the Upper Columbia which could support natural reproduction. The Columbia River Salmon Reintroduction Initiative (CRSRI), an Indigenous-led program, is now working to reintroduce these salmon to their historic habitat for the betterment of the ecosystem and cultural and economic well-being of the local Indigenous communities that once depended on them. A provincial policy – the British Columbia Wild Salmon Policy, and a Canadian law – the federal Species at Risk Act – are examined to assess their potential use to a governance system for reintroduced salmon of the Upper Columbia River Basin. Indigenous rights and land claims also provide support for First Nation’s constitutional rights to manage resources on their traditional territory. In this paper, I argue that First Nations led governance is a must in this reintroduction scenario; First Nations are well placed to lead a management program that equally takes into account Indigenous knowledge, western science, and community input. Necessary considerations for this governance framework are also outlined, citing explicitly defined long-term goals and management plans (such as distribution and abundance objectives, extent of commitment to management, and criteria to determine when salmon have been fully re-established), the consideration of potential consequences (potential implications with protection status of other species, political consequences, etc.), and iterative processes as main focus points. Key recommendations include establishing an advisory board made up of Indigenous groups, researchers, and stakeholders to implement a community-based program that works collaboratively with federal and provincial governments and programs as well as NGOs to implement the necessary biological, ... Report First Nations uO Research (University of Ottawa - uOttawa)
institution Open Polar
collection uO Research (University of Ottawa - uOttawa)
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language English
description Since the construction of the Grand Coulee Dam on the Columbia River in the mid 1900s, the passage of anadromous salmon to the Upper Columbia River Basin has been completely hindered. Studies have determined that there remains viable habitat for these species of salmon in the Upper Columbia which could support natural reproduction. The Columbia River Salmon Reintroduction Initiative (CRSRI), an Indigenous-led program, is now working to reintroduce these salmon to their historic habitat for the betterment of the ecosystem and cultural and economic well-being of the local Indigenous communities that once depended on them. A provincial policy – the British Columbia Wild Salmon Policy, and a Canadian law – the federal Species at Risk Act – are examined to assess their potential use to a governance system for reintroduced salmon of the Upper Columbia River Basin. Indigenous rights and land claims also provide support for First Nation’s constitutional rights to manage resources on their traditional territory. In this paper, I argue that First Nations led governance is a must in this reintroduction scenario; First Nations are well placed to lead a management program that equally takes into account Indigenous knowledge, western science, and community input. Necessary considerations for this governance framework are also outlined, citing explicitly defined long-term goals and management plans (such as distribution and abundance objectives, extent of commitment to management, and criteria to determine when salmon have been fully re-established), the consideration of potential consequences (potential implications with protection status of other species, political consequences, etc.), and iterative processes as main focus points. Key recommendations include establishing an advisory board made up of Indigenous groups, researchers, and stakeholders to implement a community-based program that works collaboratively with federal and provincial governments and programs as well as NGOs to implement the necessary biological, ...
author2 Marschke, Melissa
format Report
author Dufort, Alexandra
spellingShingle Dufort, Alexandra
Policy Lessons and Indigenous Governance: Providing a Basis for a Successful Salmon Reintroduction Framework in the Upper Columbia River
author_facet Dufort, Alexandra
author_sort Dufort, Alexandra
title Policy Lessons and Indigenous Governance: Providing a Basis for a Successful Salmon Reintroduction Framework in the Upper Columbia River
title_short Policy Lessons and Indigenous Governance: Providing a Basis for a Successful Salmon Reintroduction Framework in the Upper Columbia River
title_full Policy Lessons and Indigenous Governance: Providing a Basis for a Successful Salmon Reintroduction Framework in the Upper Columbia River
title_fullStr Policy Lessons and Indigenous Governance: Providing a Basis for a Successful Salmon Reintroduction Framework in the Upper Columbia River
title_full_unstemmed Policy Lessons and Indigenous Governance: Providing a Basis for a Successful Salmon Reintroduction Framework in the Upper Columbia River
title_sort policy lessons and indigenous governance: providing a basis for a successful salmon reintroduction framework in the upper columbia river
publishDate 2023
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/44871
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10393/44871
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