[en] Mining and communities in the Arctic : lessons from Baker Lake, Canada

Type de document

Instance

UNIV-MONTPELLIER

Est une partie de

Mots clés en

Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and Finance
Humanities and Social Sciences/Social Anthropology and ethnology
aboriginal rights
Arctic
Baker Lake
mining
Nunavut
subsistence self-employment

Date de publication

Langue du document

Anglais

Editeur

Inderscience

Résumé

[en] In this paper, we explore mining in Arctic Canada from the perspective of the people on the communities there, in particular the Inuit, the pre-colonial people of the area. To do so, we first provide a brief overview of the history of mining in Canada including recent incursions into Nunavut. Then, we examine the place of aboriginal people including the Inuit in the modern global economy. We focus on their desire to participate in this economy on their own terms, meaning the respect of traditional land rights, and the respect and incorporation of traditional environmental knowledge, culture, values and practices in economic activities. Following this, we examine aboriginal land rights and settlement in Northern Canada. After this is done, we go on to consider the particular case of Baker Lake in Nunavut. Finally, we draw some conclusions from the case that can be generalised to other communities in the Arctic.

Nom de la revue

International Journal of Entrepreneurship and Small Business

Collection

Source

HAL

Type de ressource

Notice

Licence

Distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

Citation bibliographique

Léo Paul Dana, Robert Brent Anderson. Mining and communities in the Arctic : lessons from Baker Lake, Canada. International Journal of Entrepreneurship and Small Business, 2014, 22 (3), pp.343-361. [10.1504/IJESB.2014.063780]. [hal-02042431]

Citer cette ressource

[en] Mining and communities in the Arctic : lessons from Baker Lake, Canada, dans Études nordiques, consulté le 7 Avril 2025, https://etudes-nordiques.cnrs.fr/s/numenord/item/18132