“What do we want and how do we get there” - A comparative review of First Nations Comprehensive Community Plans in British Columbia

First Nations are important regional development actors, and yet, their development ambitions and goals have often been ignored or poorly understood by settler governments. Since 2004, the federal government has supported First Nations band governments and Tribal Councils to develop and implement th...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kobzik, Juraj
Other Authors: Krawchenko, Tamara
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1828/13566
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spelling ftuvicpubl:oai:dspace.library.uvic.ca:1828/13566 2023-05-15T16:14:12+02:00 “What do we want and how do we get there” - A comparative review of First Nations Comprehensive Community Plans in British Columbia Kobzik, Juraj Krawchenko, Tamara 2021 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1828/13566 English en eng http://hdl.handle.net/1828/13566 Available to the World Wide Web Thesis 2021 ftuvicpubl 2022-05-19T06:13:51Z First Nations are important regional development actors, and yet, their development ambitions and goals have often been ignored or poorly understood by settler governments. Since 2004, the federal government has supported First Nations band governments and Tribal Councils to develop and implement their own community plans. The Comprehensive Community Planning process has been completed by 130 communities in British Columbia (approximately 66% out of total First Nations). These plans outline a community’s strengths/assets, opportunities, goals, and ambitions for the future across eight thematic areas that are important for community development and well-being. While this exercise is meant to strengthen community governance, it is a valuable source of information to better understand First Nations’ interests and priorities. To date, there has been no comparative analysis of First Nations Comprehensive Community Plans. This study employs comparative content analysis of all publicly available CCPs in British Columbia (n=70) in order to understand communities’ development ambitions across the eight main thematic areas. In doing so, it provides a broad overview of community priorities, differentiating by community type (urban, semi-urban, rural, and remote). Understanding community development objectives is fundamental to more effective regional development and multi-level government relations. Graduate Thesis First Nations University of Victoria (Canada): UVicDSpace
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description First Nations are important regional development actors, and yet, their development ambitions and goals have often been ignored or poorly understood by settler governments. Since 2004, the federal government has supported First Nations band governments and Tribal Councils to develop and implement their own community plans. The Comprehensive Community Planning process has been completed by 130 communities in British Columbia (approximately 66% out of total First Nations). These plans outline a community’s strengths/assets, opportunities, goals, and ambitions for the future across eight thematic areas that are important for community development and well-being. While this exercise is meant to strengthen community governance, it is a valuable source of information to better understand First Nations’ interests and priorities. To date, there has been no comparative analysis of First Nations Comprehensive Community Plans. This study employs comparative content analysis of all publicly available CCPs in British Columbia (n=70) in order to understand communities’ development ambitions across the eight main thematic areas. In doing so, it provides a broad overview of community priorities, differentiating by community type (urban, semi-urban, rural, and remote). Understanding community development objectives is fundamental to more effective regional development and multi-level government relations. Graduate
author2 Krawchenko, Tamara
format Thesis
author Kobzik, Juraj
spellingShingle Kobzik, Juraj
“What do we want and how do we get there” - A comparative review of First Nations Comprehensive Community Plans in British Columbia
author_facet Kobzik, Juraj
author_sort Kobzik, Juraj
title “What do we want and how do we get there” - A comparative review of First Nations Comprehensive Community Plans in British Columbia
title_short “What do we want and how do we get there” - A comparative review of First Nations Comprehensive Community Plans in British Columbia
title_full “What do we want and how do we get there” - A comparative review of First Nations Comprehensive Community Plans in British Columbia
title_fullStr “What do we want and how do we get there” - A comparative review of First Nations Comprehensive Community Plans in British Columbia
title_full_unstemmed “What do we want and how do we get there” - A comparative review of First Nations Comprehensive Community Plans in British Columbia
title_sort “what do we want and how do we get there” - a comparative review of first nations comprehensive community plans in british columbia
publishDate 2021
url http://hdl.handle.net/1828/13566
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1828/13566
op_rights Available to the World Wide Web
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