Available Formats:
-
Accessibility:
- Described images
- Customizable display
- Print page numbers
- Heading navigation
- Table of contents navigation
Certified Accessible By: Benetech via eBound CanadaPublisher:University of Calgary Press, 2024
Details:
- Contributor: Winter, Jennifer; Boyd, BrendanDate:Created2024Summary:
Protest and Partnership explores in detail the processes and institutions used to engage Indigenous peoples in resource development. The development of equitable relationships and outcomes among Indigenous communities, resource development companies, and governments in Canada is slow and uneven. Protest and Partnership brings together expert contributors to ask what works--and what doesn't--in these relationships. It explores what processes lead to greater involvement and control in decision-making by Indigenous Peoples and the establishment of mutually beneficial partnerships. Protest and Partnership presents case studies on a range of resource development sectors including oil and gas, renewable energy, mining, and forestry, drawn from regions across Canada. It presents a fine-grained analysis of institutions and processes, demonstrating how Indigenous communities work within and outside frameworks and processes established by governments and industry. It recognizes the persistent failure of Canadian governments to honour treaty rights and provide meaningful consultation and demonstrates how Indigenous groups, communities, and governments have engaged in self-determined resource development despite these ongoing failures. Offering broad lessons in the importance of co-management and co-governance, the autonomy of Indigenous Peoples, transparency and accountability, Indigenous economic security, and meaningful collaboration and engagement, Protest and Partnership is a thorough and careful exploration of the current state of consultation and engagement on resource development with Indigenous communities in Canada.
Contents:- Foreword
- Introduction / Brendan Boyd and Jennifer Winter
- 1. Indigenous, industry and government perspectives on consultation and engagement in resource development / Brendan Boyd, Sophie Lorefice, and Jennifer Winter
- 2. Honouring modern treaty relationships: intent and implementation of partnerships in Yukon / Kirk Cameron, Emily Martin, and Cody Sharpe
- 3. Inuit engagement in resource development approval process: the cases of Voisey's Bay and Mary River / Thierry Rodon, Aude Therrien, and Karen Bouchard
- 4. "It's time to make things right": protests and partnerships in the implementation of livelihood rights in Mi'kma'ki / L. Jane McMillan, Janice Marie Maloney, and Twila Gaudet
- 5. To consult or not to consult? A tale of two provinces / Victoria A. Bikowski and Gabrielle Slowey
- 6. Meadow Lake: looking back on 30 years of Aboriginal forest management and manufacturing / Stephen Wyatt and Jonah Dumoe
- Conclusion / Jennifer Winter and Brendan Boyd.
Subject(s): Canada | Economic development | Indigenous peoples | Indigenous peoples--Economic conditions | Indigenous peoples--Land tenure | Indigenous peoples--Legal status, laws, etc | Sustainable developmentOriginal Publisher: Calgary, Alberta, University of Calgary PressLanguage(s): EnglishISBN: 9781773852058, 1773852051, 9781773852065, 9781773852072, 1773852078Collection(s)/Series: Read Alberta Ebooks | Prairie Indigenous Ebook Collection
- Log in to post comments