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| Last Updated: :01/11/2024

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Title : FIRST NATIONS EXPECTATIONS FROM THE MINING INDUSTRY: LESSONS FROM THE TSILHQOT’IN PEOPLE
Subject : Socio Economic Environment
Volume No. : NA
Issue No. : 
Author : T.I. Kunkel, G. Halseth, and E. Petticrew, A. Mills, M. Ghomshei, R. Ellis
Printed Year : 2013
No of Pages  : 10
Description : 

The economic prosperity of many Canadian communities depends on resource extraction within the traditional territories of Indigenous people. The geographic sites where these resources are situated are also areas where these Indigenous people have sustained themselves for millennia through hunting, fishing, trapping, and gathering activities. These traditional activities provide not only sustenance, but also cultural and spiritual values, and the ability to transmit oral Indigenous cultures and customs from generation to generation. The multimillion dollar revenue mine project proposed within the Cariboo Chilcotin region of British Columbia is situated geographically in a location which has sustained the Tsilhqot’in people for millennia. However, this group of people have important social and cultural values nested within the traditional activities at this location. These values are typically not at the forefront of resource development. Using Indigenous research and grounded theory, this research paper briefly outlines Aboriginal values of the First Nations communities within the Cariboo Chilcotin region and some lessons learned from the Tsilhqot’in people during the environmental assessment of the mine proposal.

 

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