“UNSETTLING LANDSCAPES: APPLICATIONS OF ETHNOBOTANICAL RESEARCH IN DEFINING ABORIGINAL RIGHTS AND RE-AFFIRMING INDIGENOUS LAWS IN T’SOU-KE TERRITORY, VANCOUVER ISLAND AND BEYOND.”
In this dissertation, I explore how, in Canada, Indigenous people’s relationships with culturally-significant plant species are an expression of Aboriginal rights, and I ask how these rights can be affirmed and exercised using a form of intersocietal law within and between First Nations and state go...
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ftuvicpubl:oai:dspace.library.uvic.ca:1828/14287 2023-10-25T01:38:36+02:00 “UNSETTLING LANDSCAPES: APPLICATIONS OF ETHNOBOTANICAL RESEARCH IN DEFINING ABORIGINAL RIGHTS AND RE-AFFIRMING INDIGENOUS LAWS IN T’SOU-KE TERRITORY, VANCOUVER ISLAND AND BEYOND.” Spalding, Pamela Turner, Nancy J. 2022-10-04 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1828/14287 English en eng http://hdl.handle.net/1828/14287 2020 Spalding, Pamela. “Partnerships of Hope: How ethnoecology can support robust co-management agreements between public governments and Indigenous Peoples.” Plants, People and Places: the Roles of Ethnobotany and Ethnoecology in Indigenous Peoples’ Land Rights in Canada and Beyond. Chapter 21. Montreal, QU: McGill/Queen’s University Press. 2020 Turner, Nancy J. Spalding, Pamela, and Deur, Douglas. “Chapter 1. Introduction: Making a Place for Indigenous Botanical Knowledge and Environmental Values in Land Use Planning and Decision-making.” Plants, People and Places: the Roles of Ethnobotany and Ethnoecology in Indigenous Peoples’ Land Rights in Canada and Beyond. Montreal, QU: McGill/Queen’s University Press. 2018 Turner, N., & Spalding, P. "Learning from the Earth, Learning from Each Other: Ethnoecology, Responsibility and Reciprocity." In M. Asch, J. Borrows, & J. Tully (Eds.), Resurgence and Reconciliation: Indigenous-Settler Relations and Earth Teachings. Toronto, ON: University of Toronto Press. 2013 Turner, Nancy J. and Pamela Spalding. 2013. “We might go back to this”: Drawing on the past to meet the future in Coastal British Columbia Indigenous Communities. Ecology and Society, special issue, “Traditional Ecological Knowledge and Resilience in the context of Global Environmental Change”, edited by Erik Gómez-Baggethun, Victoria Reyes-García, and Esteve Corbera. Available to the World Wide Web Ethnobotany Indigenous Law Aboriginal Rights Ethnoecology T'Sou-ke Nation Thesis 2022 ftuvicpubl 2023-09-26T23:46:48Z In this dissertation, I explore how, in Canada, Indigenous people’s relationships with culturally-significant plant species are an expression of Aboriginal rights, and I ask how these rights can be affirmed and exercised using a form of intersocietal law within and between First Nations and state governments. I examine how my own and others’ ethnobotanical and ethnoecological research can help to decolonize the Crown legal systems that limit Indigenous peoples in regenerating their relationships with native plant species and the ecosystems within which they are situated. In order to explore how Indigenous people’s relationships with native plant species can be expressed in law, my dissertation is grounded in a case study, developed and carried out in collaboration with the T’Sou-ke Nation, members of which have lived on southern Vancouver Island since time immemorial as part of the Straits Salish language group. Using the T’Sou-ke case study as an example, I explain how this evidence of knowledge and use of plants helps to root contemporary First Nations’ rights throughout their territories, which is essential to establishing the basis of land and resource rights that have legal force to be claimed today.I indicate current challenges faced by T’Sou-ke Nation in exercising plant-associated rights throughout their territory and outline how the current legal test for proving Aboriginal rights is problematic. The T’Sou-ke have an abundance of rich evidence of their use of 100 native plant species and of Indigenous laws and governance associated with the same. I contend that the obvious and long-standing Indigenous management of these plant species and various ecosystems on southern Vancouver Island supports a very significant claim of legal rights and I believe that my research is broadly applicable to other First Nations in BC and beyond. The T’Sou-ke Nation, historically and today, are norm creating, generating and interpreting people as reflected in their distinct social organization adapted and adjusted by their ... Thesis First Nations University of Victoria (Canada): UVicDSpace Canada |
institution |
Open Polar |
collection |
University of Victoria (Canada): UVicDSpace |
op_collection_id |
ftuvicpubl |
language |
English |
topic |
Ethnobotany Indigenous Law Aboriginal Rights Ethnoecology T'Sou-ke Nation |
spellingShingle |
Ethnobotany Indigenous Law Aboriginal Rights Ethnoecology T'Sou-ke Nation Spalding, Pamela “UNSETTLING LANDSCAPES: APPLICATIONS OF ETHNOBOTANICAL RESEARCH IN DEFINING ABORIGINAL RIGHTS AND RE-AFFIRMING INDIGENOUS LAWS IN T’SOU-KE TERRITORY, VANCOUVER ISLAND AND BEYOND.” |
topic_facet |
Ethnobotany Indigenous Law Aboriginal Rights Ethnoecology T'Sou-ke Nation |
description |
In this dissertation, I explore how, in Canada, Indigenous people’s relationships with culturally-significant plant species are an expression of Aboriginal rights, and I ask how these rights can be affirmed and exercised using a form of intersocietal law within and between First Nations and state governments. I examine how my own and others’ ethnobotanical and ethnoecological research can help to decolonize the Crown legal systems that limit Indigenous peoples in regenerating their relationships with native plant species and the ecosystems within which they are situated. In order to explore how Indigenous people’s relationships with native plant species can be expressed in law, my dissertation is grounded in a case study, developed and carried out in collaboration with the T’Sou-ke Nation, members of which have lived on southern Vancouver Island since time immemorial as part of the Straits Salish language group. Using the T’Sou-ke case study as an example, I explain how this evidence of knowledge and use of plants helps to root contemporary First Nations’ rights throughout their territories, which is essential to establishing the basis of land and resource rights that have legal force to be claimed today.I indicate current challenges faced by T’Sou-ke Nation in exercising plant-associated rights throughout their territory and outline how the current legal test for proving Aboriginal rights is problematic. The T’Sou-ke have an abundance of rich evidence of their use of 100 native plant species and of Indigenous laws and governance associated with the same. I contend that the obvious and long-standing Indigenous management of these plant species and various ecosystems on southern Vancouver Island supports a very significant claim of legal rights and I believe that my research is broadly applicable to other First Nations in BC and beyond. The T’Sou-ke Nation, historically and today, are norm creating, generating and interpreting people as reflected in their distinct social organization adapted and adjusted by their ... |
author2 |
Turner, Nancy J. |
format |
Thesis |
author |
Spalding, Pamela |
author_facet |
Spalding, Pamela |
author_sort |
Spalding, Pamela |
title |
“UNSETTLING LANDSCAPES: APPLICATIONS OF ETHNOBOTANICAL RESEARCH IN DEFINING ABORIGINAL RIGHTS AND RE-AFFIRMING INDIGENOUS LAWS IN T’SOU-KE TERRITORY, VANCOUVER ISLAND AND BEYOND.” |
title_short |
“UNSETTLING LANDSCAPES: APPLICATIONS OF ETHNOBOTANICAL RESEARCH IN DEFINING ABORIGINAL RIGHTS AND RE-AFFIRMING INDIGENOUS LAWS IN T’SOU-KE TERRITORY, VANCOUVER ISLAND AND BEYOND.” |
title_full |
“UNSETTLING LANDSCAPES: APPLICATIONS OF ETHNOBOTANICAL RESEARCH IN DEFINING ABORIGINAL RIGHTS AND RE-AFFIRMING INDIGENOUS LAWS IN T’SOU-KE TERRITORY, VANCOUVER ISLAND AND BEYOND.” |
title_fullStr |
“UNSETTLING LANDSCAPES: APPLICATIONS OF ETHNOBOTANICAL RESEARCH IN DEFINING ABORIGINAL RIGHTS AND RE-AFFIRMING INDIGENOUS LAWS IN T’SOU-KE TERRITORY, VANCOUVER ISLAND AND BEYOND.” |
title_full_unstemmed |
“UNSETTLING LANDSCAPES: APPLICATIONS OF ETHNOBOTANICAL RESEARCH IN DEFINING ABORIGINAL RIGHTS AND RE-AFFIRMING INDIGENOUS LAWS IN T’SOU-KE TERRITORY, VANCOUVER ISLAND AND BEYOND.” |
title_sort |
“unsettling landscapes: applications of ethnobotanical research in defining aboriginal rights and re-affirming indigenous laws in t’sou-ke territory, vancouver island and beyond.” |
publishDate |
2022 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/1828/14287 |
geographic |
Canada |
geographic_facet |
Canada |
genre |
First Nations |
genre_facet |
First Nations |
op_relation |
http://hdl.handle.net/1828/14287 2020 Spalding, Pamela. “Partnerships of Hope: How ethnoecology can support robust co-management agreements between public governments and Indigenous Peoples.” Plants, People and Places: the Roles of Ethnobotany and Ethnoecology in Indigenous Peoples’ Land Rights in Canada and Beyond. Chapter 21. Montreal, QU: McGill/Queen’s University Press. 2020 Turner, Nancy J. Spalding, Pamela, and Deur, Douglas. “Chapter 1. Introduction: Making a Place for Indigenous Botanical Knowledge and Environmental Values in Land Use Planning and Decision-making.” Plants, People and Places: the Roles of Ethnobotany and Ethnoecology in Indigenous Peoples’ Land Rights in Canada and Beyond. Montreal, QU: McGill/Queen’s University Press. 2018 Turner, N., & Spalding, P. "Learning from the Earth, Learning from Each Other: Ethnoecology, Responsibility and Reciprocity." In M. Asch, J. Borrows, & J. Tully (Eds.), Resurgence and Reconciliation: Indigenous-Settler Relations and Earth Teachings. Toronto, ON: University of Toronto Press. 2013 Turner, Nancy J. and Pamela Spalding. 2013. “We might go back to this”: Drawing on the past to meet the future in Coastal British Columbia Indigenous Communities. Ecology and Society, special issue, “Traditional Ecological Knowledge and Resilience in the context of Global Environmental Change”, edited by Erik Gómez-Baggethun, Victoria Reyes-García, and Esteve Corbera. |
op_rights |
Available to the World Wide Web |
_version_ |
1780733659063517184 |