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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/23941
Title: A Case Study in Northern Québec: Indians and the Quévillon Mill – Multiple Use of Resources
Authors: Feit, Harvey A.
Department: Anthropology
Keywords: Forestry;Unsustainable Logging;Subsistence Economy;Methyl-mercury Poisoning;Aboriginal Rights;Multiple-use Forestry;Indigenous Knowledge;Co-management
Publication Date: 1972
Publisher: Terra Nova (formerly Citizens for Social Responsibility in Science)
Citation: Feit, Harvey A. 1972. “A Case Study in Northern Québec: Indians and the Quévillon Mill – Multiple Use of Resources.” In Environmental Aspects of the Pulp and Paper Industry in Quebec. Fikret Berkes, Michael J. A. Butler, Bruce Ott, and William A. Ross, eds. Montreal: Terra Nova. 2nd rev. ed. Pp. 165-171. (Revised and expanded version of the chapter in the 1971 edition of the volume published by Citizens for Social Responsibility in Science, in Montreal. Pp. 114-116).
Abstract: At present the James Bay region is utilized almost exclusively by James Bay Cree, but they have no voice on the decision-making bodies which are planning resource exploitation. This despite their aboriginal rights to the land and its produce. Cree subsistence is threatened by excessive logging and resultant game depletion, and their health is threatened by mercury released from a pulp and paper mill. Yet it should be possible to sustain hunting and health with carefully regulated forestry activities. Developing a suitable program of resource management that coordinates the needs of the Native people, crown corporations, and private industry requires that Cree have an effective voice in decision-making. Their knowledge and expertise cannot be duplicated by scientific researchers who see a portion of the region for brief periods of time. A program of multiple-use forest and environmental management is possible and it would require the cooperation and full partnership of the Cree.
Description: This is a short case study of selected social and environmental impacts of the forestry industry in the Waswanipi region of northern Quebec. It was prepared for a citizen - scientists' report on forestry impacts in Quebec.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/23941
Appears in Collections:Anthropology Publications

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