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list price: $89.95
edition:Hardcover
also available: eBook Paperback
category: Political Science
published: Feb 2020
ISBN:9780774863025
publisher: UBC Press

Indigenous Empowerment through Co-management

Land Claims Boards, Wildlife Management, and Environmental Regulation

by Graham White

tagged: environmental policy, indigenous studies
Description

Co-management boards, established under comprehensive land claims agreements, have become key players in land-use planning, wildlife management, and environmental regulation across Canada’s North. This book provides a detailed account of the operation and effectiveness of these boards while addressing a central question: Have they been successful in ensuring substantial Indigenous involvement in policies affecting the land and wildlife in their traditional territories? While identifying constraints on the role Northern Indigenous peoples play in board processes, Graham White finds that overall they exercise extensive decision-making influence. These findings are provocative and offer valuable insights into our understanding of the importance of land claims boards and the role they play in the evolution of treaty federalism in Canada.

About the Author

Graham White

Contributor Notes

Graham White is a professor emeritus in the Department of Political Science at the University of Toronto. He has been researching and writing about the politics of Northern Canada since the 1980s and has published widely on Canadian politics, especially at the provincial and territorial level. His books include Made in Nunavut (with Jack Hicks), which was shortlisted for the Canadian Political Science Association’s Smiley Prize for the best book in Canadian politics, and Cycling into Saigon (with David Cameron), which was shortlisted for the Donner Foundation Prize for the best book in Canadian public policy. He is a former president of the Canadian Political Science Association and a former English-language editor of the Canadian Journal of Political Science.

Editorial Review

 

His lucid treatment of critics and the continuing evolution of the boards up to the present is revelatory. This work is seminal for Canadians and instructive for states attempting to implement similar policies, an important contribution to the literature.

 

— CHOICE Connect

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