Aboriginal Autonomy and Development in Northern Quebec and Labrador
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Edited by:
Colin Scott
About this book
The Canadian North is witness to some of the most innovative efforts by Aboriginal peoples to reshape their relations with “mainstream” political and economic structures. Northern Quebec and Labrador are particularly dynamic examples of these efforts, composed as they are of First Nations territories that until the 1970s had never been subject to treaty but are subject to escalating industrial demands for natural resources.
The essays in this volume illuminate the process of indigenous autonomy and development in northern Quebec and Labrador. Contributors include academic specialists, Aboriginal leaders, and professionals employed within Aboriginal governments who address key conditions for autonomy and development: the definition and redefinition of national territories as cultural orders clash and mix; control of resource bases and maintenance of environments upon which northern regional economies can depend; renewal and reworking of cultural identity; and the healing of community as people cope with the damage inflicted by continued colonial intrusion into Aboriginal lands and lives.
This book will be important to all those who seek a deeper understanding of northern and Aboriginal realities. It concerns issues that we cannot, as a society, afford to neglect.
Author / Editor information
Reviews
An absorbing and very important collection of essays dealing with Aboriginal rights, titles, and struggles in Northern Quebec and Labrador. It will be a valuable resource as a teaching tool ... and to scholars, consultants, policy makers, and analysts. It will be particularly helpful to those wanting a deeper understanding of legal, cultural, and resource use conflicts in the James Bay, northern Quebec, and Labrador regions.
Georges Sioui, author of Huron/Wendat: The Heritage of the Circle:
Colin Scott is a true, lifetime ambassador of the Aboriginal North to the intellectual community. The essays in this book combine unique and brilliant scholarship with the even rarer quality of respecting the importance of Aboriginal environmental and social wisdom.
Topics
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Front Matter
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Contents
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Figures
viii -
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Preface and Acknowledgments
ix - Perspectives on the General Issues
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On Autonomy and Development
3 -
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Healing the Past, Meeting the Future
21 - (Re)defining Territory
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Shaping Modern Inuit Territorial Perception and Identity in the Quebec-Labrador Peninsula
33 -
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Writing Legal Histories on Nunavik
41 -
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The Landscape of Nunavik/The Territory of Nouveau-Québec¹
63 -
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Aboriginal Rights and Interests in Canadian Northern Seas
78 -
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Territories, Identity, and Modernity among the Atikamekw (Haut St-Maurice, Quebec)
98 - Resource Management and Development Conflicts
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Voices from a Disappearing Forest: Government, Corporate, and Cree Participatory Forestry Management Practices
119 -
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Conflicts between Cree Hunting and Sport Hunting: Co-Management Decision Making at James Bay
149 -
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Becoming a Mercury Dealer: Moral Implications and the Construction of Objective Knowledge for the James Bay Cree
175 -
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Media Contestation of the James Bay and Northern Québec Agreement: The Social Construction of the “Cree Problem”
206 -
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Low-Level Military Flight Training in Quebec-Labrador: The Anatomy of a Northern Development Conflict
233 -
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The Land Claims Negotiations of the Montagnais, or Innu, of the Province of Quebec and the Management of Natural Resources
255 - Community, Identity, and Governance
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Community Dispersal and Organization: The Case of Oujé-Bougoumou
277 -
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Gathering Knowledge: Reflections on the Anthropology of Identity, Aboriginality, and the Annual Gatherings in Whapmagoostui, Quebec
289 -
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Building a Community in the Town of Chisasibi
304 -
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Cultural Change in Mistissini: Implications for Self-Determination and Cultural Survival
316 -
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The Decolonization of the Self and the Recolonization of Knowledge: The Politics of Nunavik Health Care
332 -
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Country Space as a Healing Place: Community Healing at Sheshatshiu
357 -
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The Concept of Community and the Challenge for Self-Government
379 -
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The Double Bind of Aboriginal Self-Government
396 - In Conclusion
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Ways Forward
417 -
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Contributors
427 -
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Index
428