[PDF][PDF] Indigenous fire management: a conceptual model from literature.

WD Nikolakis, E Roberts - Ecology & Society, 2020 - researchgate.net
Culture influences how fire is perceived and managed in societies. An increasing risk of
catastrophic wildfire has shifted political and academic attention on the use of Indigenous …

Indigenous processes of consent: Repoliticizing water governance through legal pluralism

D Curran - Water, 2019 - mdpi.com
While international instruments and a few state governments endorse the “free, prior and
informed consent” of Indigenous peoples in decision-making about the water in their …

Empowering small-scale, community-based fisheries through a food systems framework

K Lowitt, CZ Levkoe, A Spring, C Turlo, PL Williams… - Marine Policy, 2020 - Elsevier
In the context of the growing climate emergency and the negative social and environmental
impacts of the industrial food system, significant attention is focused on the question of how …

Connecting community-based monitoring to Arctic environmental decision-making and governance: A systematic scoping review of the literature

NJ Wilson, E Worden, G O'Hanlon - Arctic Science, 2023 - cdnsciencepub.com
Arctic community-based monitoring (CBM) programs have proliferated in recent decades.
While the desire to influence decision-making is frequently listed as a motivation for CBM …

Purposeful stakeholder engagement for improved environmental flow outcomes

ML Mussehl, AC Horne, JA Webb… - Frontiers in Environmental …, 2022 - frontiersin.org
Rivers are dynamic social-ecological systems that support societies and ecosystems in a
multitude of ways, giving rise to a variety of user groups and competing interests …

Indigenous land rights: where are we today and where should the research go in the future?

N Ojong - Settler Colonial Studies, 2020 - Taylor & Francis
The indigenous struggle to secure land rights remains a highly contentious issue. This
article offers a qualitative discussion of key concepts and a quantitative description of the …

Multilevel governance, climate (in) justice, and settler colonialism—evidence from First Nations disaster evacuations in so-called Canada

M Do, A Janzwood, K Pue - Critical Policy Studies, 2024 - Taylor & Francis
Wildfires and subsequent community evacuations offer a highly visible example of climate
change-induced dislocation. In so-called Canada, both the changing climate and …

Reasserting Traditional Knowledge across a fragmented governance landscape: The Mackenzie River Basin

A Latta - Current Directions in Water Scarcity Research, 2022 - Elsevier
Indigenous Peoples' knowledge offers important foundations for stewardship and
environmental management of the Mackenzie River watershed, North America's largest …

National minorities and Indigenous Peoples in multilevel governance

MG Breen, A Thomas - A Research Agenda for Multilevel …, 2021 - elgaronline.com
National minorities and Indigenous Peoples are becoming increasingly important actors in
systems of multilevel governance (MLG). However, the research on this is still in its infancy …

Addressing cumulative effects in the context of sustainability and co-governance in Tr'ondëk Hwëch'in traditional territory, Yukon

K Staples - 2022 - uwspace.uwaterloo.ca
Cumulative effects and impacts associated with non-renewable resource development are
issues of sustainability, with potentially significant implications over broad geographic and …