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The Dispossession of the Innu and the Colonial Magic of Canadian Liberalism
Colin Samson Citizenship Studies, Vol. 3, No. 1, February 1999, pp. 5-25. Examines the reasons and legal aspects used by Canada to dispossess aboriginal people who have not ceded land through treaties, such as the Innu of Labrador-Quebec. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 1, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Domestic Hunting and Fishing by Manitoba Indians: Magnitude Composition and Implications for Management
M.W. Wagner The Canadian Journal of Native Studies, Vol. 6, No. 2, 1986, pp. 333-349. Indian reservations were surveyed regarding their consumption of wildlife. Calls for increased joint management efforts between provincial and Indian governments to identify all forces affecting wildlife populations and to create equitable conservation programs. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 3, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Domestic Resistance: Gardening, Mothering, and Storytelling in Leslie Marmon Silko's Gardens in the Dunes
Stephanie Li Studies in American Indian Literatures, Vol. 21, No. 1, Spring, 2009, pp. 18-37. Explains that although the author was planning on writing a novel with no political subject matter, she found that gardening was actually very political. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 1, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
The Domino Effect: Culture Change and Environmental Change in Newfoundland, 1500-1100 cal BP
Trevor Bell, M.A.P. Renouf Northern Review, No. 28, Winter, 2008, pp. 72-94. Suggests that warming sea temperatures impacted harp seal resources which in turn displaced the Dorset Paleoeskimos from the area. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 1, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Doo Dilzin Da: Abuse of the Natural World
Robert Begay American Indian Quarterly, Vol. 25, No. 1, 2001, pp. 21-27. Examines the effects of the tourism and mining industries on the northern Arizona ecosystem and suggests management strategies aimed at minimizing the impact on traditional way of life. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 2, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
A Dry Oasis: The Canadian Plains in Late Prehistory
James Daschuk Prairie Forum, Vol. 34, No. 1, Spring, 2009, pp. 1-29. Discusses how two key subsistence strategies, used by First Nations peoples to combat drought, were threatened when the ways of the modern world spread to the Great Plains. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 1, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Early Holocene Archaeology and Paleoecology at the Arrow Creek Sites in Gwaii Haanas
Daryl W. Fedje, Joanne B. McSporran, Andrew R. Mason Arctic Anthropology, Vol. 33, No. 1, 1996, pp. 116-143. Discusses two archaeological sites dating from around 5500 to 9300 years ago that were discovered in the Queen Charlotte Islands, British Columbia. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 4, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Early Man and Changing Sea Levels, Poplar Island, Maryland
Ralph S. Solecki American Antiquity, Vol. 27, No. 2, October 1961, pp. 234-236. Discusses climate change and discovery of a projectile point on an island in Chesapeake Bay. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 1, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Early Man in America and the Late Pleistocene Chronology of Western Canada and Alaska
Alan L. Bryan Current Anthropology, Vol. 10, No. 4, October 1969, pp. 339-365. Glacial chronology and its implications for early humankind. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 1, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
The Early Man Site at Warm Mineral Springs, Florida
Carl J. Clausen, H. K. Brooks, Al B. Wesolowsky Journal of Field Archaeology, Vol. 2, No. 3, 1975, pp. 191-213. Excavation reveals 10,000 year-old remains, 13 metres underground, indicative of arid climate during that period. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 1, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Earth, Animals, and Academics: Plateau Indian Communities, Culture, and the Walla Walla Council of 1855
Clifford E. Trafzer American Indian Culture and Research Journal, Vol. 17, No. 3, Special Issue on Encounter of Two Worlds: The Next Five Hundred Years, 1993, pp. 81-100. Argues that historiography, too often, overlooks traditional beliefs and oral histories, especially those regarding the earth, plants, and animals which significantly influenced the course of Aboriginal history. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 1, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
"The Earth Itself Was Sobbing": Madness and the Environment in Novels by Leslie Marmon Silko and Louise Erdrich
Peter G. Beidler American Indian Culture and Research Journal, Vol. 26, No. 3, 2002, pp. 113-124. Discussion of how two novelists have brought attention to the way Caucasian people have harmed the environment. The article also suggests that Aboriginal peoples are economic and social victims of the scarred earth and its destroyed forests, a fact which has driven some insane. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 1, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Earthquake-Induced Subsidence and Burial of Late Holocene Archaeological Sites, Northern Oregon Coast
Rick Minor, Wendy C. Grant American Antiquity, Vol. 61, No. 4, October 1996, pp. 772-781. Examines climatic events that have changed habitation patterns. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 1, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Ecofeminism and First Nations Peoples in Canada: Linking Culture, Gender and Nature
Kathi Wilson Gender, Place & Culture: A Journal of Feminist Geography, Vol. 12, No. 3, September 2005, pp. 333-355. Includes interviews with Anishinabek describing their connections to Mother Earth (nature) and discusses how such narratives may provide a better understanding of gender-nature connections. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 1, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Ecological and Cultural Contributions of Controlled Fire Use by Native Californians: A Survey of Literature
Timothy A. Jordan American Indian Culture and Research Journal, Vol. 27, No. 1, 2003, pp. 77-90. Examines fire management practices of Native American people in California, prior to Euro-American contact. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 2, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Ecological Complexity, Fuzzy Logic, and Holism in Indigenous Knowledge
Fikret Berkes, Mina Kislalioglu Berkes Futures, Vol. 41, No. 1, Futures of Indigenous Knowledges , February 2009, pp. 6-12. Looks at how indigenous knowledge is able to deal with ecosystems as complex adaptive systems by using simple prescriptions, consistent with fuzzy logic thinking. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 1, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Ecological Restoration as Post-Colonial Ritual of Community in Three Native American Novels
Christopher Norden Studies in American Indian Literatures, Vol. 6, No. 4, Series 2: Critical Approaches, Winter, 1994, pp. 94-106. Examines the ritual-based relationship between human beings and their natural environment. The article also discusses a reconciliation between human cultures and nature. Entire issue on one PDF. To access article, scroll down to appropriate page. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 1, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Ecological Risk Assessment and Management: Their Failure to Value Indigenous Traditional Ecological Knowledge and Protect Tribal Homelands
Jeanette Wolfley American Indian Culture and Research Journal, Vol. 22, No. 2, 1998, pp. 151-169. Discusses the role that Indigenous knowledge can and should play in protecting and preserving ecosystems and Aboriginal communities. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 1, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Ecologically Noble Savage Debate
Raymond Hames Annual Review of Anthropology, Vol. 36, September 2007, pp. 177-190. Discusses two aspects of a debate surrounding the concept that indigenous attitude toward the environment and conservation is the most appropriate model. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 4, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
The Ecology and Economy of Indigenous Resistance: Divergent Perspectives on Mining in New Caledonia
Saleem H. Ali, Andrew Singh Grewal The Contemporary Pacific, Vol. 18, No. 2, Fall, 2006, pp. 361-393. Presents a comparative analysis of two projects; findings indicate greater transparency, flexibility, and Indigenous ownership, decreased resistance encountered. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 1, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Economic Analysis of Energy-Efficiency Measures: Tribal Case Studies with the Yurok Tribe, the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes of the Flathead Reservation, and the Pascua Yaqui Tribe
Thomas L. Acker, William M. Auberle, John D. Eastwood, David R. Laroche, Amanda S. Ormond, Robert P. Slack, Dean H. Smith American Indian Culture and Research Journal, Vol. 29, No. 1, 2005, pp. 79-96. Results of three energy-efficiency case studies conducted with three different Native American groups in the western United States. The purpose of the case studies was to demonstrate that energy efficiency is economically feasible, has the potential to reduce air pollution, and can help communities meet other goals. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 1, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Economic Development as if Culture Matters: Inuvialuit Wild Game Harvesting, Community-Based Economic Development, and Cultural Maintenance in the Western Arctic
Martin Whittles Journal of Aboriginal Economic Development, Vol. 4, No. 2, Special Edition: The State of the Aboriginal Economy: 10 Years After RCAP, Fall, 2005, pp. 129-140. Looks at a project to harvest and market muskox meat, horns, hides, and quiviut (textile-grade soft body hair) to embed sustainable renewable resource development within traditional Inuvialuit culture. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 3, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Economic Development on American Indian Reservations: A Citation Analysis
Cheryl Metoyer-Duran, Peter Hernon Library & Information Science Research, Vol. 17, No. 1, Winter, 1995, pp. 49-67. Analyzed the literature on gaming and natural resource exploitation in terms of authors, publication forms, type of source, titles of frequently cited works, and age of publication. Compared results to previous study by Metoyer-Duran. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 0, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Editorial: Sharing Aboriginal Knowledge and Aboriginal Ways of Knowing
Jo-ann Archibald Canadian Journal of Native Education, Vol. 25, No. 1, 2001, pp. 1-5. Introduction to a themed issue of the same title. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 3, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Editor's Introduction: Lessons From Research (Volume 3, Number 1)
Fred Wien The Journal of Aboriginal Economic Development, Vol. 3, No. 1, Special Issue on Sustainability, Summer, pp. 27-28. Brief, introductory article mentions the two different perspectives on sustainability as illustrated by the nine papers included in the section. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 1, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites |
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