Monitoring Expertise: A perspective on environmental impacts monitoring in northeast British Columbia

The shale gas industry in northeast British Columbia is rapidly expanding and is promoted by the provincial government as a promising economic venture for the entire province. However, the industry is having impacts on the traditional territory of the Fort Nelson First Nation, although they have con...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Twerdoclib, Christine
Other Authors: Shaw, Karena
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1828/6676
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spelling ftuvicpubl:oai:dspace.library.uvic.ca:1828/6676 2023-05-15T16:16:43+02:00 Monitoring Expertise: A perspective on environmental impacts monitoring in northeast British Columbia Twerdoclib, Christine Shaw, Karena 2015 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1828/6676 English en eng http://hdl.handle.net/1828/6676 Available to the World Wide Web Shale gas First Nations Natural resource management Environmental impacts monitoring Decision-making British Columbia Thesis 2015 ftuvicpubl 2022-05-19T06:13:14Z The shale gas industry in northeast British Columbia is rapidly expanding and is promoted by the provincial government as a promising economic venture for the entire province. However, the industry is having impacts on the traditional territory of the Fort Nelson First Nation, although they have constitutionally recognized treaty rights to continue to use the land to meet their subsistence needs. I conducted this research in partnership with the Fort Nelson First Nation Department of Lands and Resources, with a focus on critically assessing the challenges they face. This research focuses on determining how the Fort Nelson First Nation can protect their treaty rights by taking control of, or inserting themselves into the data collection and monitoring activities of the shale gas industry. Utilizing a theory of knowledge politics, this research analyzes two strategies that challenge what knowledge should count, and on what terms: (1) the Fort Nelson First Nation’s participation and appropriation of the professionalized science regime and (2) the development of the Fort Nelson First Nation’s community-based monitoring program and its ability to impact decision-making. Drawing on primary research, participant observation, literature reviews and document analyses, I argue that these strategies are crucial and can create – but do not guarantee – links to affecting natural resource management decisions. Graduate Thesis First Nations Fort Nelson University of Victoria (Canada): UVicDSpace Fort Nelson ENVELOPE(-122.700,-122.700,58.805,58.805)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Victoria (Canada): UVicDSpace
op_collection_id ftuvicpubl
language English
topic Shale gas
First Nations
Natural resource management
Environmental impacts monitoring
Decision-making
British Columbia
spellingShingle Shale gas
First Nations
Natural resource management
Environmental impacts monitoring
Decision-making
British Columbia
Twerdoclib, Christine
Monitoring Expertise: A perspective on environmental impacts monitoring in northeast British Columbia
topic_facet Shale gas
First Nations
Natural resource management
Environmental impacts monitoring
Decision-making
British Columbia
description The shale gas industry in northeast British Columbia is rapidly expanding and is promoted by the provincial government as a promising economic venture for the entire province. However, the industry is having impacts on the traditional territory of the Fort Nelson First Nation, although they have constitutionally recognized treaty rights to continue to use the land to meet their subsistence needs. I conducted this research in partnership with the Fort Nelson First Nation Department of Lands and Resources, with a focus on critically assessing the challenges they face. This research focuses on determining how the Fort Nelson First Nation can protect their treaty rights by taking control of, or inserting themselves into the data collection and monitoring activities of the shale gas industry. Utilizing a theory of knowledge politics, this research analyzes two strategies that challenge what knowledge should count, and on what terms: (1) the Fort Nelson First Nation’s participation and appropriation of the professionalized science regime and (2) the development of the Fort Nelson First Nation’s community-based monitoring program and its ability to impact decision-making. Drawing on primary research, participant observation, literature reviews and document analyses, I argue that these strategies are crucial and can create – but do not guarantee – links to affecting natural resource management decisions. Graduate
author2 Shaw, Karena
format Thesis
author Twerdoclib, Christine
author_facet Twerdoclib, Christine
author_sort Twerdoclib, Christine
title Monitoring Expertise: A perspective on environmental impacts monitoring in northeast British Columbia
title_short Monitoring Expertise: A perspective on environmental impacts monitoring in northeast British Columbia
title_full Monitoring Expertise: A perspective on environmental impacts monitoring in northeast British Columbia
title_fullStr Monitoring Expertise: A perspective on environmental impacts monitoring in northeast British Columbia
title_full_unstemmed Monitoring Expertise: A perspective on environmental impacts monitoring in northeast British Columbia
title_sort monitoring expertise: a perspective on environmental impacts monitoring in northeast british columbia
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/1828/6676
long_lat ENVELOPE(-122.700,-122.700,58.805,58.805)
geographic Fort Nelson
geographic_facet Fort Nelson
genre First Nations
Fort Nelson
genre_facet First Nations
Fort Nelson
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1828/6676
op_rights Available to the World Wide Web
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