The situation and the evolution of forest management by Aboriginal people in British Columbia

This thesis addresses the situation of First Nations people in forestry of British Columbia. Aboriginal people in British Columbia have been involved in the forest industry as laborers since the 1850s when the commercial logging operations began in the province, but have been politically and econ...

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Main Author: Hasegawa, Atsuko
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/11539
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.2429-115392014-03-14T15:45:22Z The situation and the evolution of forest management by Aboriginal people in British Columbia Hasegawa, Atsuko Forest management -- British Columbia -- History. Sustainable forestry -- British Columbia -- History. Old growth forest conservation -- British Columbia. Indians of North America -- British Columbia -- Government relations. This thesis addresses the situation of First Nations people in forestry of British Columbia. Aboriginal people in British Columbia have been involved in the forest industry as laborers since the 1850s when the commercial logging operations began in the province, but have been politically and economically marginalized in the industry. The institutional and economic factors not only have restricted aboriginal people to control over forest resources on their traditional lands but have affected their forest management practices. For aboriginal communities, it is a critical issue that protecting old growth forests, with which they are culturally associated, without giving up economic benefit generated from harvesting these forests. In order to suggest possible changes and approaches for shaping native forest management in the existing institutional and economic frameworks, I examined the issues of provincial forestry and analyzed how these issues effect and interact with aboriginal people. It is important but difficult for First Nations to obtain forest tenure because their resource management is related to their land rights. However, the issues of aboriginal people in forestry overlap with those of the province. Thus, perspectives and participation of aboriginal people is critical for the government and the industry. Forestry of British Columbia is in transition and has begun to consider the potential contribution of aboriginal people to sustainable forestry. Therefore, aboriginal people have a significant role to play in the future of forestry. 2009-07-30T22:52:36Z 2009-07-30T22:52:36Z 2001 2009-07-30T22:52:36Z 2001-05 Electronic Thesis or Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/11539 eng UBC Retrospective Theses Digitization Project [http://www.library.ubc.ca/archives/retro_theses/]
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Forest management -- British Columbia -- History.
Sustainable forestry -- British Columbia -- History.
Old growth forest conservation -- British Columbia.
Indians of North America -- British Columbia -- Government relations.
spellingShingle Forest management -- British Columbia -- History.
Sustainable forestry -- British Columbia -- History.
Old growth forest conservation -- British Columbia.
Indians of North America -- British Columbia -- Government relations.
Hasegawa, Atsuko
The situation and the evolution of forest management by Aboriginal people in British Columbia
description This thesis addresses the situation of First Nations people in forestry of British Columbia. Aboriginal people in British Columbia have been involved in the forest industry as laborers since the 1850s when the commercial logging operations began in the province, but have been politically and economically marginalized in the industry. The institutional and economic factors not only have restricted aboriginal people to control over forest resources on their traditional lands but have affected their forest management practices. For aboriginal communities, it is a critical issue that protecting old growth forests, with which they are culturally associated, without giving up economic benefit generated from harvesting these forests. In order to suggest possible changes and approaches for shaping native forest management in the existing institutional and economic frameworks, I examined the issues of provincial forestry and analyzed how these issues effect and interact with aboriginal people. It is important but difficult for First Nations to obtain forest tenure because their resource management is related to their land rights. However, the issues of aboriginal people in forestry overlap with those of the province. Thus, perspectives and participation of aboriginal people is critical for the government and the industry. Forestry of British Columbia is in transition and has begun to consider the potential contribution of aboriginal people to sustainable forestry. Therefore, aboriginal people have a significant role to play in the future of forestry.
author Hasegawa, Atsuko
author_facet Hasegawa, Atsuko
author_sort Hasegawa, Atsuko
title The situation and the evolution of forest management by Aboriginal people in British Columbia
title_short The situation and the evolution of forest management by Aboriginal people in British Columbia
title_full The situation and the evolution of forest management by Aboriginal people in British Columbia
title_fullStr The situation and the evolution of forest management by Aboriginal people in British Columbia
title_full_unstemmed The situation and the evolution of forest management by Aboriginal people in British Columbia
title_sort situation and the evolution of forest management by aboriginal people in british columbia
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/11539
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