Abstract

Introduction (Charles R. Menzies - University of British Columbia and Caroline Butler -University of Northern British Columbia)Part 1: Indigenous Practices and Natural Resources1: Tidal Pulse Fishing: Selective Traditional Tlingit Salmon Fishing Techniques on the West Coast of the Prince of Wales Archipelago (Steve J. Langdon - University of Alaska-Anchorage) 2: As it was in the Past: A Return to the Use of Live Capture Technology in the Aboriginal Riverine Fishery (Kimberly Linkous Brown) 3: The Forest and the Seaweed: Gitga'at Seaweed, Traditional Ecological Knowledge and Community Survival (Nancy J. Turner - University of Victoria and Helen Clifton - Elder of the Gitga'at Nation) 4: Ecological Knowledge, Subsistence, and Livelihood Practices: The Case of the Pine Mushroom Harvest in Northwestern British Columbia (Charles R. Menzies)Part 2: Local Knowledge and Contemporary Resource Management5: Historizing Indigenous Knowledge: Practical and Political Issues (Caroline Butler) 6: The Case of the Missing Sheep: Time, Space, and the Politics of Trust in Co-Management Practice (Paul Nadasdy - University of Wisconsin-Madison) 7: Local Knowledge, Multiple Livelihoods, and the Use of Natural and Social Resources in North Carolina. (David Griffith - East Carolina University) 8: Integrating Fishers' Knowledge into Fisheries Science and Management: Possibilities, Prospects, and Problems (James R. McGoodwin - University of Colorado-Boulder)Part 3: Learning from Local Ecological Knowledge: Practical Approaches9: Honoring Aboriginal Science Knowledge and Wisdom in an Environmental Education Graduate Program (Gloria Snively - University of Victoria) 10: Traditional Wisdom as Practiced and Transmitted in Northwestern British Columbia, Canada (John Corsiglia - University of Victoria)Afterword: Making Connections for the Future (Charles R. Menzies)

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