Search
Skip to Search Results- 59Tracking Change
- 43Tracking Change/Conference Presentations/Posters
- 21Tracking Change/Newsletters/Media
- 11Research Impact Canada
- 11Research Impact Canada/Knowledge Mobilization Funding 2020
- 3Tracking Change/Reports (Tracking Change)
- 6Tracking Change
- 5D'Souza, Amabel
- 4Howlett, Tracy; Parlee, Brenda
- 4Spicer, Neal
- 3Martin, Chelsea
- 3Parlee, Brenda
- 11Local and Traditional Knowledge
- 9Watershed Governance
- 7Tracking Change
- 3Amazon Basin, Brazil
- 2Amazon
- 2Drinking Water
-
2016-06-01
Parlee, Brenda; Maloney, Elaine
This event brought together youth from the various jurisdictions of the Mackenzie River Basin. The objectives of the fair was to create an oportunity for students from junior high and high school to connect with each other and learn about their own histories, ecosystems, and communities....
-
Arapaima Co-Management: Reconciling Biodiversity Conservation and Human Well-Being in the Amazon
Download2017-04-01
Freitas, Carolina; Lopes Priscila
Arapaima (Arapaima spp. is the largest freshwaters calefish in the world, and an iconic element of the Amazon region. This fish yields high ecological, economic and cultural value to Amazonian ecosystems and people. Whereas in the past arapaima could reach up to 3m long and weigh up to 200kg,...
-
2017-02-01
A global knowledge symposium was planned for 2017 in Thailand for February 20-25th in the city of Ubon Ratchathani. Research team members will be hosted at Ubon Ratchathani University and in the local fishing village of Kho Tai. The meeting created opportunities for presentations (oral/poster) by...
-
Local and Traditional Knowledge Indicators for Tracking Socio-Ecological Changes in Inuvialuit Fishing Livelihoods
Download2017-04-01
Vazquez, Iria Heredia; Hynes, Kristin; Wesche, Sonia
The Mackenzie Delta is an important freshwater system that is vulnerable to multiple stressors, including: climate change impacts in the Arctic; resource development activities (oil & natural gas), and upstream-downstream linkages. These pressures can affect traditional livelihoods, including...
-
2017-04-01
Water is an essential part of life and viable sources of clean and drinkable water is a challenge for many people across the planet. Unfortunately, this challenge exists for many First Nation communities across Canada as seen by a series of reports and investigations that have appeared over the...
-
Understanding Socio-Ecological Changes in Inuvialuit Fishing Livelihoods and Implications for Food Security: The Role of Local and Traditional Knowledge
Download2017-11-01
The Mackenzie Delta is an ecologically-rich freshwater environment in Canada’s Northwest Territories. It is vulnerable to multiple stressors such as climate change, resource development activities (oil and natural gas) and upstream-downstream linkages related to extraction activities in the...
-
The Importance of Traditional Knowledge for Maintaining Fishing Livelihoods During Times of Change in the Sahtú Region
Download2017-11-01
Few studies have focused on the climate related knowledge and experiences of First Nations including the Sahtú Gotin’e of the Mackenzie River Basin. This project will help address this gap while at the same time investigating how the livelihoods of Sahtú Got’ine fishers are impacted or adapting...
-
2017-04-01
Tsannie, Joe; Johnson, Johanne
Explores the history of the Athabasca River Basin region and the Denesuline peoples of Northern Saskatchewan through traditional knowledge, legends, and stories. This includes the concept of spirit power derived from the spiritual relationship between people and animals, creation stories that...
-
Impacts of Hydroelectric Development on Local Communities: The Mun River, Ubon Ratchathani, Thailand
Download2017-04-01
Hydroelectric development has had numerous impacts on local fishing communities. For those living along the Mun River the Pak Mun Dam has severely impacted their livelihoods. However as 25 years have passed, locals have adapted their knowledge to survive the changing ecology. The aim of this...