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First Nations Water Security and Collaborative Governance. Chippewas of Kettle and Stony Point First Nation, Ontario, Canada.

机译:第一民族水安全与合作治理。 Kettle和Stony Point First Nation的Chippewas,安大略省,加拿大。

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摘要

This research investigates the interrelationships between First Nations and Western approaches to water, and the opportunities and barriers to collaboration in water governance, with the goal of enhancing First Nations water security.;Four main objectives guided this research: 1) to identify the critical concerns for water in First Nations communities and the challenges for First Nations water security; 2) to investigate First Nations knowledge systems and management institutions for how they may support enhanced community-level water security; 3) to conduct a targeted in-depth examination of the challenges to enhancing water security with respect to federal, provincial and First Nations water institutions and arrangements; and 4) to develop strategies based on best practices for more effective water collaboration through integration of the key concepts, empirical evidence and new research findings. The Institutional Analysis and Development (IAD) framework guided the research inquiry, and conceptual underpinnings drew from water security, water governance, integrated water resource management, Indigenous approaches, institutional theory, and collaboration literatures.;During 2010 and 2011, a single case study was conducted with the Chippewas of Kettle and Stony Point First Nation (KSPFN), located in southwestern Ontario. The case study included two embedded units of analysis: the First Nation community and the wider water governance context. Forty semi-structured interviews were conducted with First Nations Elders, and First Nations, federal, provincial, and municipal water actors. Nearly 100 documents were gathered, interviews were coded using QSR NVivo 9, and data triangulation among these sources aided the identification of common trends, themes and patterns from which the discussion and conclusions were generated.;This research offers several empirical and conceptual contributions. Interview results and data analysis of the KSPFN concerns and challenges identified eight areas of critical water security concerns: surface and groundwater quality, monitoring and environmental enforcement, invasive species and aquatic ecology, human health and uncertainty, lake levels and withdrawals, water and wastewater system, Stony Point water, and aboriginal rights and involvement. Challenges to KSPFN water security were found to relate to water governance on First Nations reserves, including: actor interaction, governance structure, financial arrangements, laws and regulations, and community factors. A second group of challenges was found that relate more specifically to broader water governance in Canada. These include rights and jurisdiction, water collaboration, legislation and regulations, and social-economic factors.;The research also revealed that the Chippewas of Kettle and Stony Point have a long history within their traditional territory along the southern shore of Lake Huron. As Anishinabek people, traditional culture involved a livelihood and land-based economy that was dependent on a sacred and harmonious relationship with water. Codes of behaviour for appropriate relationships with all of nature were transmitted through a combination of informal institutions (e.g., ceremonies, stories) and social-political structures (e.g., clan governance). Although the influence of Western institutions has altered the traditional relationship with water for many Anishinabek people, traditional approaches can support current water security in key areas: value of water, guiding principles, collaborative governance, informal institutions, integration and systems understanding, and sustainability practices.;Overall, First Nations water security was found to involve a range of traditional and contemporary views about water use and protection. This research widens the conceptual lens for examining First Nations water security and asserts that it involves three interdependent and embedded dimensions or conceptual units of analysis: ecological, social-political, and technical. Each dimension emphasizes a critical component of First Nations water security and the scope of governance actions to begin addressing First Nations water concerns and challenges. The research also highlights the utility of the IAD framework for examining the role institutions play in First Nations water security within the multi-level, fragmented and overlapping water jurisdictions characteristic of water governance in Canada. Lastly, the results yielded an adapted IAD framework that illustrates the influence federal, provincial and municipal water institutions have on water security actions available to First Nations water actors.;The research provides key insights and pathways to water security and overall recommendations for water security actors. The analysis presents seven suggested pathways to water security that require constitutional, collective-choice and operational level actions. The pathways include a collaborative relationship among actors committed to water security, equitable and legitimate involvement of First Nations in water governance, First Nations rights in formal water institutions (e.g., recognition of First Nations values in water laws), a regulatory framework for drinking water to fill the regulatory gap supported by appropriate funding arrangements, new collaborative approaches for policy making, greater local control over community land and resource management, and expanded informal collaboration among First Nations and a variety of actors and organizations (e.g., municipal, academic). (Abstract shortened by UMI.).
机译:这项研究调查了原住民与西方水务方法之间的相互关系,以及在水治理方面进行合作的机会和障碍,目的是加强原住民的水安全。指导该研究的四个主要目标:1)找出关键问题用于原住民社区的水以及原住民水安全的挑战; 2)调查原住民知识体系和管理机构,以了解它们如何支持增强社区一级的水安全; 3)针对联邦,省和原住民的水机构和安排,针对加强水安全的挑战进行针对性的深入研究; 4)通过整合关键概念,经验证据和新的研究成果,以最佳实践为基础制定战略,以实现更有效的水合作。机构分析与发展(IAD)框架指导了研究探究,水安全,水治理,综合水资源管理,土著方法,机构理论和协作文献汲取了概念基础;在2010年和2011年期间,进行了一次个案研究这项研究是与位于安大略省西南部的Kettle和Stony Point First Nation(KSPFN)的Chippewas进行的。案例研究包括两个嵌入式分析单元:第一民族社区和更广泛的水治理环境。与原住民长者,原住民,联邦,省和市级水行为者进行了40次半结构化访谈。收集了近100份文档,使用QSR NVivo 9对访谈进行了编码,这些来源中的数据三角剖分有助于识别共同的趋势,主题和模式,从而从中得出讨论和结论。该研究提供了一些经验和概念性的贡献。对KSPFN关注和挑战的访谈结果和数据分析确定了水安全关键关注的八个领域:地表水和地下水质量,监测和环境执法,入侵物种和水生生态,人类健康和不确定性,湖泊水位和取水量,水和废水系统,石质点水以及原住民的权利和参与。发现对KSPFN水安全的挑战与原住民保护区的水治理有关,包括:参与者互动,治理结构,财务安排,法律和法规以及社区因素。发现第二组挑战更具体地涉及加拿大的更广泛的水管理。其中包括权利和管辖权,水合作,立法和法规以及社会经济因素。研究还显示,水壶和奇石角奇珀瓦人在休伦湖南岸的传统领土内拥有悠久的历史。作为Anishinabek族人,传统文化涉及一种生计和土地经济,这种经济依赖与水之间神圣而和谐的关系。通过非正式机构(例如仪式,故事)和社会政治结构(例如氏族治理)的结合,传播了与大自然建立适当关系的行为守则。尽管西方机构的影响已经改变了许多Anishinabek人与水的传统关系,但传统方法可以在关键领域支持当前的水安全:水的价值,指导原则,合作治理,非正式机构,对系统的整合和系统的理解以及可持续性实践总的来说,发现原住民的水安全涉及有关用水和保护的一系列传统和现代观点。这项研究拓宽了检查原住民水安全的概念范围,并声称它涉及三个相互依存的,内在的维度或分析的概念单元:生态,社会政治和技术。每个方面都强调了原住民水安全的关键组成部分以及开始着手解决原住民水问题和挑战的治理行动的范围。该研究还强调了IAD框架在检查机构在加拿大水治理的多层次,分散和重叠的水域管辖权内在原住民水安全中所扮演的角色时的效用。最后,结果产生了一个经过修改的IAD框架,该框架说明了联邦,省和市级水机构对原住民水行为者可以采取的水安全行动的影响;该研究为水安全行为提供了重要的见解和途径,并为水安全行为者提供了总体建议。分析提出了七项建议的水安全途径,需要宪法,集体选择和运营级别的行动。这些途径包括致力于水安全的行为者之间的合作关系,原住民公平合法参与水治理,原住民在正式水机构中的权利(例如,在水法中承认原住民价值观),饮用水监管框架填补适当的供资安排,制定新的协作方法,加强对社区土地和资源管理的地方控制以及扩大原住民与各种行为体和组织(例如市政,学术机构)之间的非正式合作所支持的监管空白。 (摘要由UMI缩短。)。

著录项

  • 作者

    Longboat, Sheri A.;

  • 作者单位

    Wilfrid Laurier University (Canada).;

  • 授予单位 Wilfrid Laurier University (Canada).;
  • 学科 Geography.;Water Resource Management.;Native American Studies.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2013
  • 页码 315 p.
  • 总页数 315
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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