Tracking change in the Canadian National Parks: from one crisis to another

This research assesses changes in Canada’s national park system between the years 2000-2015 and places these changes within the broad social, political, and economic context in Canada, as well as within trends in international conservation policy and practice. The animating research questions includ...

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Main Author: Kalynka, Karen
Other Authors: Dempsey, Jessica Anne
Format: Others
Language:English
en
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1828/11832
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spelling ndltd-uvic.ca-oai-dspace.library.uvic.ca-1828-118322020-06-11T03:34:27Z Tracking change in the Canadian National Parks: from one crisis to another Kalynka, Karen Dempsey, Jessica Anne ecological integrity national parks canada neoliberalism organization change nation building This research assesses changes in Canada’s national park system between the years 2000-2015 and places these changes within the broad social, political, and economic context in Canada, as well as within trends in international conservation policy and practice. The animating research questions include: how did Parks Canada respond in the fifteen years following the report of the 2000 Panel on Environmental Integrity? What political, economic, and cultural factors influenced Parks Canada Agency in this period? A further research question emerged from my findings: Why has it been so hard for Parks Canada to lead with ecological integrity as its first priority? Through a political ecological lens, the research utilizes a mixed methods approach. Using semi-formal interviews with retired Parks Canada managers, I was able to establish what had changed and how these changes were interpreted by these former employees. I also interviewed environmental NGOs to gather information on how those outside the Agency viewed the changes taking place within Parks Canada. I then collected and reviewed primary Parks Canada documents to establish the main changes, including of policy, as well as budgets and expenditures. My research found that in this period, despite efforts to shift the culture of the organization of Parks Canada to ecological integrity (EI) the Agency deepened its emphasis on visitor experience. The most recent "decade of change" in Canadian national parks policy and practice is thus reminiscent of the century-long struggle to determine whom or what parks are for and the role that Parks Canada plays in the production of Canadian identity. Although we are tempted to conclude that the decades repeat themselves like a pendulum swinging between “use” and “preservation,” this analysis suggests that this decade of change is distinct from the previous decades, with the institution increasingly emphasizing its role as nation-builder and tourism provider. This research purposes that a kind of Polanyian “double movement” is playing out on a new foundational terrain characterized by neoliberal solutions for conservation, a terrain influenced by a broader, global neoliberal transformation within state institutions. Graduate 2021-05-18 2020-06-10T06:49:50Z 2020 2020-06-09 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1828/11832 English en Available to the World Wide Web application/pdf
collection NDLTD
language English
en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic ecological integrity
national parks
canada
neoliberalism
organization change
nation building
spellingShingle ecological integrity
national parks
canada
neoliberalism
organization change
nation building
Kalynka, Karen
Tracking change in the Canadian National Parks: from one crisis to another
description This research assesses changes in Canada’s national park system between the years 2000-2015 and places these changes within the broad social, political, and economic context in Canada, as well as within trends in international conservation policy and practice. The animating research questions include: how did Parks Canada respond in the fifteen years following the report of the 2000 Panel on Environmental Integrity? What political, economic, and cultural factors influenced Parks Canada Agency in this period? A further research question emerged from my findings: Why has it been so hard for Parks Canada to lead with ecological integrity as its first priority? Through a political ecological lens, the research utilizes a mixed methods approach. Using semi-formal interviews with retired Parks Canada managers, I was able to establish what had changed and how these changes were interpreted by these former employees. I also interviewed environmental NGOs to gather information on how those outside the Agency viewed the changes taking place within Parks Canada. I then collected and reviewed primary Parks Canada documents to establish the main changes, including of policy, as well as budgets and expenditures. My research found that in this period, despite efforts to shift the culture of the organization of Parks Canada to ecological integrity (EI) the Agency deepened its emphasis on visitor experience. The most recent "decade of change" in Canadian national parks policy and practice is thus reminiscent of the century-long struggle to determine whom or what parks are for and the role that Parks Canada plays in the production of Canadian identity. Although we are tempted to conclude that the decades repeat themselves like a pendulum swinging between “use” and “preservation,” this analysis suggests that this decade of change is distinct from the previous decades, with the institution increasingly emphasizing its role as nation-builder and tourism provider. This research purposes that a kind of Polanyian “double movement” is playing out on a new foundational terrain characterized by neoliberal solutions for conservation, a terrain influenced by a broader, global neoliberal transformation within state institutions. === Graduate === 2021-05-18
author2 Dempsey, Jessica Anne
author_facet Dempsey, Jessica Anne
Kalynka, Karen
author Kalynka, Karen
author_sort Kalynka, Karen
title Tracking change in the Canadian National Parks: from one crisis to another
title_short Tracking change in the Canadian National Parks: from one crisis to another
title_full Tracking change in the Canadian National Parks: from one crisis to another
title_fullStr Tracking change in the Canadian National Parks: from one crisis to another
title_full_unstemmed Tracking change in the Canadian National Parks: from one crisis to another
title_sort tracking change in the canadian national parks: from one crisis to another
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/1828/11832
work_keys_str_mv AT kalynkakaren trackingchangeinthecanadiannationalparksfromonecrisistoanother
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