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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/24043
Title: Affidavit. [On the Social Impacts of Commercial Forestry on James Bay Cree.]
Authors: Feit, Harvey A.
Department: Anthropology
Keywords: Commercial Forestry Regulation;Logging Impacts;Northern Mixed Economy;Hunting and Jobs;Sharing and Reciprocity;Co-governance;James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement (JBNQA);James Bay Cree
Publication Date: 1999
Citation: Feit, Harvey A. 1999. “Affidavit” [On the Social Impacts of Commercial Forestry on James Bay Cree], submitted to Quebec Superior Court (No. 500-05-043203-981) in Mario Lord et al., vs. The Attorney-General of Québec et al. 29 pp.
Abstract: The Grand Council of the Cree (Eeyou Istchee) requested that I prepare an Affidavit on the social impacts of commercial forestry operations. This was for their court case against the Government of Québec and over two dozen forestry companies operating in the James Bay territory for acting in ways that violated the obligations under the James Bay and Northern Québec Agreement of 1975, as well as in violation of other legal obligations. My Affidavit was based mainly on my research with Waswanipi people from 1968-70, 1978-85, and 1997-99. Dozens of Cree hunters and families gave affidavits for the court case, and they were the experts. I sought in my statement on impacts to draw on the knowledge that had been shared with me during research with Cree. This was an opportunity to put to reciprocal use the contributions of Cree research participants. I described the current “Northern mixed economy” of hunting and wage labor. Then discussed how Cree community life, including work and education, were adapted to fit with hunting activities and the training of youth. I emphasized how the sharing and reciprocity which were embedded in hunting traditions and practices were important to the foundations of societal reproduction and land stewardship of the Cree. Drawing on dozens of conversations with hunters and their families, I summarized what they said were the impacts of forestry on land, water, game, the regeneration of vegetation and trees, and their lives. I discussed the limits of hunters’ ability to adapt to intensive logging, and the changes I heard were needed in forestry practices. This included the possibilities they saw for joint use of the land with forestry companies if mutual and respectful forestry decision-making was practiced, which they considered a right and a necessity for all involved in the region for the long-term.
Description: This court case was settled out of court as part of a new agreement negotiated between the Grand Council of the Cree and the Government of Québec in 2002, the “Agreement Concerning a New Relationship (Paix des Braves)”. The Agreement included special provisions for some joint forestry management by Québec, forestry companies, Cree entities, and families who have governing responsibilities for Cree hunting territories. These provisions, whose implementation would depend on expanded and effective government regulation of commercial forestry, have not been fully or extensively implemented by Québec as of 2018. Parts of the material for my Affidavit later appeared in print in: Feit, Harvey A. and Robert Beaulieu. 2001. “Voices from a Disappearing Forest: Government, Corporate and Cree Participatory Forestry Management Practices.” In Aboriginal Autonomy and Development in Northern Quebec and Labrador. Colin H. Scott, ed. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press. Pp. 119-148. Available at: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/24041.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/24043
Appears in Collections:Anthropology Publications

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