Title | Planning co-existence: Aboriginal issues in forest and land use planning |
Publication Type | Book |
Year of Publication | 2010 |
Authors | Stevenson, M. G., & Natcher D. C. |
Corporate Authors | Sustainable Forest Management Network |
Place Published | Edmonton: CCI Press |
Publication Language | en |
ISBN Number | 9781896445496; 1896445497 |
Keywords | Aboriginal, Canadian State, Crown, environmental justice, forest management, forestry, fudiciary obligation, land use, social justice, Sustainable Forest Management Network, treaties, Treaty 8 |
Abstract | "For centuries Canada's Aboriginal peoples have sought to enter into treaties of peace and friendship with colonial settlers based on the principles of sharing and co-existence. However, the latter remains an elusive goal as the land use rights and interests of Canada's Aboriginal peoples have yet to be reconciled with those of other Canadians. To date, the solutions have been inequitable, forcing Aboriginal peoples to either accept the policies and institutions imposed upon them by the Canadian State, or refuse to participate at all. Planning Co-Existence - the second of two volumes highlighting the critical research of the Aboriginal Program of the Sustainable Forest Management Network - presents the question: How do we begin to accommodate the land and resource use rights and interests of Canada's Aboriginal peoples while fi nding common ground for co-existence with other Canadians who have come to occupy these shared spaces? By addressing this question, Planning Co-Existence explores the current state of land use planning in Canada, what may be required to meet the Crown's legal and fi duciary obligations in these processes, and a variety of issues of central importance to Aboriginal peoples that need to be addressed in the design and implementation of forestry and land use plans. In so doing, this volume lays the groundwork for a more informed discussion about reconciliation and co-existence in the context of Aboriginal land use planning in Canada in the hope of achieving social and environmental justice sooner rather than later."- |
Notes | """Research and insights from the Aboriginal Research Program of the Sustainable Forest Management Network: volume II."" |
Topics | First Nations, land-use, forest management, planning, Indians of North America, First Nations, Aboriginal peoples, Canadian State |
Locational Keywords | northern Alberta, Alberta |
Active Link | |
Group | CEMA |
Citation Key | 22152 |