Aboriginal forest tenure and governance in British Columbia : exploring alternatives from a Stellat'en First Nation community perspective
The purpose of this research is to contribute to the identification of appropriate forest tenure and governance designs that are in congruence with Aboriginal values, interests and rights. The research is highly relevant to current societal deliberations on sustainable forest management as well as...
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ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-7892018-01-05T17:22:44Z Aboriginal forest tenure and governance in British Columbia : exploring alternatives from a Stellat'en First Nation community perspective Weber, Sarah Elizabeth Aboriginal forest tenure Stellat'en First Nations British Columbia Forest governance Forest management Community ecosytem trust BC Community Forest Agreements American reservations Carrier Sekani Tribal Council Traditional territory The purpose of this research is to contribute to the identification of appropriate forest tenure and governance designs that are in congruence with Aboriginal values, interests and rights. The research is highly relevant to current societal deliberations on sustainable forest management as well as to the future of the forest sector in Canada. First Nations culture and ways of life are intimately and inextricably tied to the land. Some eighty percent of Canada’s First Nations communities are situated in productive forest regions (NAFA 2003). Even so, First Nations have been largely excluded from forest development and planning activities. Furthermore, the provincial policy emphasis on industrial timber production may not be consistent with Aboriginal forest values. This community-based research takes a participatory approach to forest policy analysis. The work is conducted in partnership with the Stellat’en First Nation and Carrier Sekani Tribal Council in central British Columbia. Stellat’en criteria for forest tenure and governance are identified in a series of workshops and interviews. These criteria are then applied in the analysis of four alternative models: the Community Ecosystem Trust, the Gitanyow joint land use planning model, BC Community Forest Agreements and Aboriginal reservations in the United States. The results indicated that Stellat’en have three main goals regarding forest tenure and governance: protect the traditional territory for future generations, protect Stellat’en culture and support Stellat’en economic self-determination. Implementation of the Stellat’en vision calls for a greater emphasis on ecological and cultural values in forest management, devolution of decision making authority to First Nations, reallocation of harvesting rights and redistribution of wealth generated by forest activities. The Stellat’en perspective emphasizes co-existence and stewardship. Evaluation of the four alternative models provided useful insights for progressive tenure and governance design. All four models had positive aspects to contribute, as well as shortcomings. The models are not mutually exclusive. Since each model addresses different management and institutional functions, they could be combined into a new system for the future. Forestry, Faculty of Graduate 2008-04-30T14:54:14Z 2008-04-30T14:54:14Z 2008 2008-11 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/789 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ 1481734 bytes application/pdf University of British Columbia |
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English |
format |
Others
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Aboriginal forest tenure Stellat'en First Nations British Columbia Forest governance Forest management Community ecosytem trust BC Community Forest Agreements American reservations Carrier Sekani Tribal Council Traditional territory |
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Aboriginal forest tenure Stellat'en First Nations British Columbia Forest governance Forest management Community ecosytem trust BC Community Forest Agreements American reservations Carrier Sekani Tribal Council Traditional territory Weber, Sarah Elizabeth Aboriginal forest tenure and governance in British Columbia : exploring alternatives from a Stellat'en First Nation community perspective |
description |
The purpose of this research is to contribute to the identification of appropriate forest tenure and governance designs that are in congruence with Aboriginal values, interests and rights. The research is highly relevant to current societal deliberations on sustainable forest management as well as to the future of the forest sector in Canada.
First Nations culture and ways of life are intimately and inextricably tied to the land. Some eighty percent of Canada’s First Nations communities are situated in productive forest regions (NAFA 2003). Even so, First Nations have been largely excluded from forest development and planning activities. Furthermore, the provincial policy emphasis on industrial timber production may not be consistent with Aboriginal forest values.
This community-based research takes a participatory approach to forest policy analysis. The work is conducted in partnership with the Stellat’en First Nation and Carrier Sekani Tribal Council in central British Columbia. Stellat’en criteria for forest tenure and governance are identified in a series of workshops and interviews. These criteria are then applied in the analysis of four alternative models: the Community Ecosystem Trust, the Gitanyow joint land use planning model, BC Community Forest Agreements and Aboriginal reservations in the United States.
The results indicated that Stellat’en have three main goals regarding forest tenure and governance: protect the traditional territory for future generations, protect Stellat’en culture and support Stellat’en economic self-determination. Implementation of the Stellat’en vision calls for a greater emphasis on ecological and cultural values in forest management, devolution of decision making authority to First Nations, reallocation of harvesting rights and redistribution of wealth generated by forest activities. The Stellat’en perspective emphasizes co-existence and stewardship.
Evaluation of the four alternative models provided useful insights for progressive tenure and governance design. All four models had positive aspects to contribute, as well as shortcomings. The models are not mutually exclusive. Since each model addresses different management and institutional functions, they could be combined into a new system for the future. === Forestry, Faculty of === Graduate |
author |
Weber, Sarah Elizabeth |
author_facet |
Weber, Sarah Elizabeth |
author_sort |
Weber, Sarah Elizabeth |
title |
Aboriginal forest tenure and governance in British Columbia : exploring alternatives from a Stellat'en First Nation community perspective |
title_short |
Aboriginal forest tenure and governance in British Columbia : exploring alternatives from a Stellat'en First Nation community perspective |
title_full |
Aboriginal forest tenure and governance in British Columbia : exploring alternatives from a Stellat'en First Nation community perspective |
title_fullStr |
Aboriginal forest tenure and governance in British Columbia : exploring alternatives from a Stellat'en First Nation community perspective |
title_full_unstemmed |
Aboriginal forest tenure and governance in British Columbia : exploring alternatives from a Stellat'en First Nation community perspective |
title_sort |
aboriginal forest tenure and governance in british columbia : exploring alternatives from a stellat'en first nation community perspective |
publisher |
University of British Columbia |
publishDate |
2008 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2429/789 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT webersarahelizabeth aboriginalforesttenureandgovernanceinbritishcolumbiaexploringalternativesfromastellatenfirstnationcommunityperspective |
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1718581337494913024 |