@book{122,
keywords = {fisheries, Native Americans, American Indians, resource management, Arctic regions, First Peoples, Eskimos, Inuit},
author = {Milton M. R. Freeman and Ludwig N. Carbyn},
title = {Traditional knowledge and renewable resource management in northern regions},
abstract = {
Contains following papers:
- Environmental philosophy of the Chisasibi Cree People of James Bay (Fikret Berkes),
- The contribution of the ecological knowledge of Inuit to wildlife management in the Northwest Territories (Anne Gunn, Goo Arlooktoo, and David Kaomayok),
- The Inuit and wildlife management today (Rick Riewe and Lloyd Gamble),
- State and indigenous fisheries management: the Alaska context (Polly Wheeler),
- Sámi reindeer pastoralism as an indigenous resource management system in northern Norway: A contribution to the common property debate (Ivar Bjorklund),
- The role of subsistence resource commissions in managing Alaska's new national parks (Richard Caulfield),
- Traditional knowledge, adaptive management and advances in scientific understanding (Miriam McDonald),
- Self-management and state-management: forms of knowing and managing northern wildlife (Harvey Feit),
- Wildlife management in the North American Artic: the case for co-management (Gail Osherenko),
- Selected bibliography of native resource management systems and native knowledge of the environment (Thomas H. Andrews)
},
year = {1988},
journal = {Occasional publication (Boreal Institute for Northern Studies); no. 23},
pages = {124},
month = {01/1988},
publisher = {IUCN Commission on Ecology and the Canadian Circumpolar Institute, Boreal Institute for Northern Studies},
address = {Edmonton, AB, Canada},
issn = {0068-0303},
isbn = {978-0-919058-68-2},
url = {http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/658935111},
note = {A joint publication of the IUCN Commission on Ecology and the Boreal Institute for Northern Studies},
language = {English},
}