Linked e-resources

Details

Cover
Half Title
Title
Copyright
Contents
Contributors
Preface
Map
Part I. Background and Policy Issues
Introduction
Chapter 1. Diversity and Complexity of Tribal Fish and Wildlife Programs
Chapter 2. A Vision of Unity and Equity: Conversations with the Founders of the Native American Fish and Wildlife Society and a Look toward the Future with Native American Youth
Chapter 3. Connecting People, Science, and Culture
Chapter 4. Who Stands for the River?
Part II. Legal Issues

Chapter 5. The Importance of Meaningful Federal-Tribal Consultation in Land and Natural Resource Management
Chapter 6. An Introduction to Indian Reserved Water Rights
Chapter 7. The Promise of Intertribal Wildlife Management
Chapter 8. State Regulation and Enforcing Usufructuary Treaty Rights
Chapter 9. Tribal Perspectives on the Endangered Species Act
Chapter 10. Sinixt Hunting: A Test of Tribal Sovereignty
Chapter 11. "we always knew," "wetlands"
Part III. Resource Use, Protection, and Management

Chapter 12. The Indigenous Sentinels Network: Community-Based Monitoring to Enhance Food Security
Chapter 13. The Indigenous Guardians Network for Southeast Alaska
Chapter 14. Glyph
Chapter 15. Case Studies of Species Recovery and Management of Trumpeter Swan and Leopard Frog on the Flathead Indian Reservation
Chapter 16. Co-Management in Alaska: A Partnership among Indigenous, State, and Federal Entities for the Subsistence Harvest of Migratory Birds
Chapter 17. Research with Tribes: A Suggested Framework for the Co-Production of Knowledge

Chapter 18. Thoughts of an Anishinaabe Poet on Wildlife Biology
Chapter 19. Protecting What We've Been Blessed With: Big Game and Other Wildlife Programs of the Navajo Nation
Chapter 20. Shash
Chapter 21. A Model for Stewardship: The Lower Brule Sioux Tribal Wildlife Department
Chapter 22. Reclaiming Ancestral Lands and Relationships
Chapter 23. We Feel Our Place in Our Soul: Perspectives from a Fond du Lac Elder
Chapter 24. Partnerships Are the Key to Conservation
Chapter 25. Burmese Python Impacts and Management on the Miccosukee Reservation, Florida

Chapter 26. So Many Things That Humble Me
Chapter 27. Swamp Boy's Pet and Field Guide (after Aimee Nezhukumatathil)
Part IV. Traditional Ecological Knowledge
Chapter 28. Talutsa: Weaving a Cherokee Future
Chapter 29. A Traditional Strategy to Promote Ecosystem Balance and Cultural Well-Being Utilizing the Values, Philosophies, and Knowledge Systems of Indigenous Peoples
Chapter 30. The Making and Unmaking of an Indigenous Desert Oasis and Its Avifauna: Historic Declines in Quitobaquito Birds as a Result in Shifts from O'odham Stewardship to Federal Agency Management

Browse Subjects

Show more subjects...

Statistics

from
to
Export