Sustainable tourism development and Indigenous protected and conserved areas in sub-arctic Canada

Emalee A. Vandermale, Courtney W. Mason
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Abstract

Rural and northern Indigenous communities across Canada are pursuing new Indigenous-led conservation partnerships with Crown governments as critical alternatives to Western conservation and extractive industries regimes. Colonial conservation policies and industrial development continue to displace Indigenous Peoples from their ancestral territories, with great consequences to land-based economies, food security, and knowledges. Indigenous-led conservation is an umbrella term used to describe a variety of initiatives that includes Indigenous Protected and Conserved Areas. Indigenous communities lead the creation, management, and stewardship of these protected areas, which are guided by localized knowledge and priorities. This creates unique opportunities to build new and bolster existing tourism businesses with sustainable socio-economic, cultural, and environmental outcomes. Our research examines Indigenous-led conservation and tourism in the Dene/Métis community of Fort Providence, Northwest Territories, located adjacent to Canada's first official Indigenous Protected and Conserved Area, Edéhzhíe. Guided by Indigenous methodologies and collaborative approaches, this paper presents the analysis of 23 semi-structured interviews with Elders, knowledgeable land users, and community members. While tourism development in the community is currently limited, our results indicate that participants are hopeful about the contributions of Edéhzhíe and tourism to sustainable economies, cultural resurgence, and environmental stewardship in the surrounding communities. Participants demonstrate that Indigenous-led conservation and tourism have the potential to challenge existing colonial, capitalist land use regimes and foster Indigenous governance, reconciliatory processes, and environmental resiliency. Our findings can be used by other Indigenous communities to inform conservation and sustainable development goals related to regional tourism economies.
加拿大亚北极地区可持续旅游业发展与土著保护区和保留区
加拿大各地的农村和北部原住民社区正在寻求与王国政府建立新的由原住民主导的保护伙伴关系,以此作为西方保护和采掘业制度的重要替代方案。殖民主义保护政策和工业发展继续将土著居民赶出他们祖先的领地,给以土地为基础的经济、粮食安全和知识带来了严重后果。土著主导的保护是一个总称,用来描述包括土著保护区和保留区在内的各种举措。土著社区领导这些保护区的创建、管理和指导工作,并以本地化知识和优先事项为指导。这为建立新的旅游业务和加强现有的旅游业务创造了独特的机会,并带来了可持续的社会经济、文化和环境成果。我们的研究考察了西北地区普罗维登斯堡 Dene/Métis 社区由土著主导的保护和旅游业,该社区毗邻加拿大首个官方土著保护区 Edéhzhíe。本文以土著方法论和合作方式为指导,对 23 个半结构式访谈进行了分析,访谈对象包括长老、知识渊博的土地使用者和社区成员。虽然目前该社区的旅游业发展有限,但我们的结果表明,参与者对埃代日耶和旅游业对周边社区的可持续经济、文化复兴和环境管理所做的贡献充满希望。参与者表明,土著主导的保护和旅游业有可能挑战现有的殖民主义和资本主义土地使用制度,促进土著治理、和解进程和环境复原力。其他土著社区可利用我们的研究结果,为与地区旅游经济相关的保护和可持续发展目标提供信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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