Introduction: From Beavers to Land: Building on Past Debates to Unpack the Contemporary Entanglements of Algonquian Family Hunting Territories
DOI :
https://doi.org/10.3138/anth.60.1.t06Résumé
En 1986, Anthropologica publiait un numéro spécial sur les territoires de chasse familiaux Algonquiens comportant diverses recherches ethnographiques qui renversaient, ancraient ou recadraient les travaux antérieurs portant sur les origines ou décrivant le communisme primitif des systèmes de propriété foncière Algonquiens. Le numéro présentait des recherches développées dans le cadre de la montée de revendications politiques et juridiques Autochtones pour le maintien de leur mode vie et de leur gouvernance territoriale alors que se multipliaient les interventions économiques et étatiques sur leurs terres. Dans cette Introduction au numéro thématique, nous présentons un aperçu historique ainsi qu'un nouveau cadre conceptuel pour analyser la territorialité et la gouvernance autochtones, informés par la manière dont les Algonquiens continuent de répondre aux défis auxquels ils font face depuis trente ans. Nous décrivons l'évolution de la gouvernance et des façons de vivre des Algonquiens parmi les initiatives d'extraction et d'exploitation des ressources sur leurs terres, ainsi que certaines transformations importantes au sein des socialités Algonquiennes.
Téléchargements
Références
Adelson, Naomi. 2000. Being Alive Well: Health and the Politics of Cree Well-Being. Toronto: University of Toronto Press
Armitage, Peter. 1990. Land Use and Occupancy among the Innu of Utshimassit and Sheshatshit. Report Prepared for the Innu Nation. Sheshatshit: Nitassinan
Association Mamo Atoskewin Atikamekw (AMAA). 1994. Rapport Final, Identification et protection de l'usage Atikamekw de la forêt, Phase II. La Tuque: Conseil de Bandde de la nation Attikamekw
Atkinson, Myriam, and Monica Mulrennan. 2009. “Local Protest and Resistance to the Rupert Diversion Project, Northern Quebec.” Arctic 62(4): 468–480. https://doi.org/10.14430/arctic177
Berkes, Fikret. 1986. “Common Property Resources and Hunting Territories.” In “Who Owns the Beaver? Northern Algonquian Land Tenure Reconsidered,” ed. Toby Morantz and Charles Bishop. Special issue, Anthropologica 28(1–2): 145–162. https://doi.org/10.2307/25605196
Berkes, Fikret. 1988. “Environmental Philosophy of the Chisasibi People of James Bay.” In Traditional Knowledge and Renewable Resource Management in Northern Regions, ed. Milton M.R. Freeman and Ludwig N. Carbyn, 7–21. Edmonton: Boreal Institute for Northern Studies
Bishop and Morantz. 1986. “Historical Perspectives on Family Hunting Territories in Eastern James Bay.” In “Who Owns the Beaver? Northern Algonquian Land Tenure Reconsidered,” ed. Charles Bishop and Toby Morantz. Special issue, Anthropologica 28(1–2): 64–91
Bousquet, Marie-Pierre. 1999. “Sites ancestraux et territoire chez les Algonquins du Québec.” Canadian Studies 47: 29–40
Bousquet, Marie-Pierre. 2002. “‘Quand nous vivions dans le bois.' Le changements spatial et sa dimension générationnelle: l'exemple des Algonquins du Canada.” PhD dissertation, Université Laval
Bousquet, Marie-Pierre. 2005. “Des lois, des cartes et de valeurs sociales: les débats générationnels dans une communauté Algonquine du Québec.” In Papers of the 36th Algonquian Conference, ed. H.C. Wolfart, 53–74. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba
Bousquet, Marie-Pierre. 2012. “Êtres libres ou sauvages à civiliser? L'éducation des jeunes Indiens dans les pensionnats au Québec, des années 1950 à 1970.” In Enfances déplacées en situation colonial, ed. M. Gardet and D. Niquet, 163–192. Rennes: Presses Universitaires de Rennes
Brelsford, Taylor. 1983. “Hunters and Workers among the Nemaska Cree: The Role of Ideology in a Dependant Mode of Production.” MA thesis, McGill University
Carlson, Hans. 2004. “A Watershed of Words: Litigating and Negotiating Nature in Eastern James Bay, 1971–75.” Canadian Historical Review 85(1): 63–84. https://doi.org/10.3138/CHR.85.1.63
Carlson, Hans. 2008. Home Is the Hunter. Vancouver: UBC Press
Chamberland, Roland, Mariano Lopez, Jacques Leroux, Steve Audet, and Serge Bouillé. 2004. Terra Incognita des Kotakoutouemis. L'Alonquinie orientale au XVIIe siècle. Québec: Presses de l'Université Laval
Chance, Norman A., ed. 1968. Conflict in Culture. Problems of Developmental Change among the Cree. Ottawa: Canadian Research Centre for Anthropology, Saint Paul's University
Chaplier, Mélanie. 2014. “La ‘Paix des Braves' et la gestion des ressources naturelles chez les Cris de la baie James (Québec). Transformations du territoire et conséquences sur le rôle du tallyman.” In Terres (dés)humanisées: ressources et climat, ed. Charlotte Bréda, Mélanie Chaplier, Julie Hermesse, and Emmanuelle Piccoli, 127–153. Louvain-la-Neuve: Academia Bruylandt
Chaplier, Mélanie. 2018. “Property as Sharing: A Reflection on the Nature of Land Ownership among the Nemaska Crees after the ‘Paix des Braves.'” Anthropologica 60(1): 61–75
Charest, Paul. 1995. “La composition des groupes de chasse chez les Mamit Innuat.” In La construction de l'anthropologie québécoise. Mélanges offerts à Marc-Adélard Tremblay, ed. François Trudel, Paul Charest, and Yvan Breton, 367–396. Québec: Les Presses de l'Université Laval
Charest, Paul. 1996. “La supposée disparition des Atikamekw et des Montagnais.” Recherches amérindiennes au Québec 26(2): 84–85
Clermont, Norman. 1977. Ma femme, ma hache et mon couteau croche: deux siècles d'histoire à Weymontachie. Québec: Ministère des Affaires culturelles
Conseil Atikamekw-Montagnais. 1982. Nihastanan nitasinan [Notre terre, nous l'aimons et nous y tenons]: revendications territoriales des bandes Attikamèques et montagnaises. Conseil Attikamek-Montagnais. Représentant du gouvernement du Canada, Québec
Conseil de la Nation Atikamekw Nehirowisiw (CNA). 1997. Politique sociale Atikamekw. Conseil de la Nation Atikamekw, Québec
Conseil de la Nation Atikamekw Nehirowisiw (CNA). 1998. E Nehiromonaniwok ka aicinikateki Atikamekw iriniw kitci Masinahikan otci ka wi orasinahikatek/Version atikamekw des termes utilisés dans la consultation sur la constitution atikamekw. La Tuque : Conseil de la Nation Atikamekw
Cooper, John. 1939. “Is the Algonkian Hunting Ground System Pre-Columbian?” American Anthropologist 41(1): 66–90. https://doi.org/10.1525/aa.1939.41.1.02a00060
Craik, Brian. 2004. “The Importance of Working Together: Exclusions, Conflicts, and Participation in James Bay, Quebec.” In In the Way of Development: Indigenous Peoples, Life Projects and Globalization, ed. Mario Blaser, Harvey A. Feit, and Glenn McRae, 166–186. New York: Zed Books
Craik, Brian, and Byers Casgrain. 1986. “Making a Living in the Bush: Land Tenure at Waskaganish.” Anthropologica 28(1–2): 175–186. https://doi.org/10.2307/25605198
Cruikshank, Julie. 1993. “The Politics of Ethnography in the Canadian North.” In Anthropology, Public Policy, and Native Peoples in Canada, ed. James Waldram and Noel Dyck, 133–145. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press
Dandenault, André. 1983. “Occupation et utilisation du territoire par les Attikameks de Weymontachie.” In Rapport de recherche dans le cadre du projet sur l'occupation et l'utilisation du territoire, ed. D. Brassard and D. Castonguay. Québec: Village des Hurons
Davidson, D. Sutherland. 1928. “The Family Hunting Territories of the Grand Lake Victoria Indians.” Proceedings of the 22nd International Congress of Americanists, 69–95
Desbiens, Caroline. 2004. “Nation to Nation: Defining New Structures of Development in Northern Quebec.” Economic Geography 80(4): 351–366. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1944-8287.2004.tb00242.x
Desbiens, Caroline. 2008. “Le Jardin au Bout du Monde: Terre, texte et production du paysage à la Baie James.” Recherches amérindiennes au Québec 38(1): 7–15. https://doi.org/10.7202/039739ar
Desbiens, Caroline. 2013a. Power from the North: Territory, Identity, and the Culture of Hydroelectricity in Quebec. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press
Desbiens, Caroline. 2013b. “From Passive to Active Dialogue? Aboriginal Lands, Development and Metissage in Quebec, Canada.” Cultural Geographies 21(1): 99–114
Descola, Philippe. 2005. Par-delà nature et culture. Paris: Gallimard
Désy, Pierrette. 1968. “Fort-George ou Tsesa-Sippi.” Thesis, Université La Sorbonne
Dussart, Françoise, and Sylvie Poirier. 2017. Entangled Territorialities: Negotiating Indigenous Lands in Australia and Canada. Toronto: University of Toronto Press
Ethier, Benoît. 2014. “Nehirowisiw Kiskeritamowina: Acquisition, utilisation et transmission de savoir-faire et de savoir-être dans un monde de chasseurs.” Recherches amérindiennes au Québec 44(1): 49–59. https://doi.org/10.7202/1027879ar
Feit, Harvey. 1971. “L'ethno-écologie des Cris Waswanipis, ou comment des chasseurs peuvent aménager leurs ressources.” Recherches amérindiennes au Québec 1(4–5): 84–91
Feit, Harvey. 1982. “The Future of Hunters within Nations-States: Anthropology and the James Bay Cree.” In Politics and History in Band Societies, ed. Eleanor Leacock and Richard Borshay Lee, 373–411. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
Feit, Harvey. 1989. “James Bay Cree Self-Governance and Land Management.” In We Are Here: Politics of Aboriginal Land Tenure, ed. Edwin N. Wilmsen, 68–98. Los Angeles: University of California Press
Feit, Harvey. 1991a. “Gifts of the Land: Hunting Territories, Guaranteed Incomes and the Construction of Social Relations in James Bay Cree Society.” Senri Ethnological Studies 30: 223–268
Feit, Harvey. 1991b. “The Construction of Algonquian Hunting Territories. Private Property as Moral Lesson, Policy Advocacy, and Ethnographic Error. In Colonial Situations: Essays on the Contextualization of Ethnographic Knowledge, ed. George W. Stocking Jr., 109–134. History of Anthropology 7. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press
Feit, Harvey. 2000. “Les animaux comme partenaires de chasse: réciprocité chez les Cris de la Baie James.” Terrain 34: 123–142
Feit, Harvey. 2004a. “James Bay Crees' Life Projects and Politics: Histories of Place, Animal Partners and Enduring Relationships.” In In the Way of Development: Indigenous Peoples, Life Projects and Globalization, ed. Mario Blaser, Harvey A. Feit, and Glenn McRae, 92–110. London: Zed Books
Feit, Harvey. 2004b [1995]. “Hunting and the Quest for Power: The James Bay Cree and Whiteman Development.” In Native Peoples: The Canadian Experience, ed. R. Bruce Morrison and C. Roderick Wilson, 101–128. Toronto: Oxford University Press
Feit, Harvey. 2005. “Re-cognizing Co-management as Co-governance: Histories and Visions of Conservation at James Bay.” Anthropologica 47(2): 267–288
Feit, Harvey. 2005b. “Histories of the Past, Histories of the Future: The Committed Anthropologies of Richard Slobodin, Franck G. Speck, and Eleanor Leacock.” In A Kindly Scrutiny of Human Nature: In Honour of Richard Slobodin, ed. R.J. Preston, 45–76. Waterloo: Wilfrid Laurier University Press
Feit, Harvey. 2009. “Governmental Rationalities and Indigenous Co-governance: James Bay Cree Coexistence, from Mercantilist Partnerships to Neoliberal Mechanisms. In Unsettled Legitimacy. Political Community, Power and Authority in a Global Era, ed. Steven Bernstein and William D. Coleman, 97–128. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press
Feit, Harvey. 2010. “Neoliberal Governance and James Bay Cree Governance: Negotiated Agreements, Oppositional Struggles, and Co-governance.” In Indigenous People and Autonomy. Insights for a Global Age, ed. Mario Blaser, Ravi de Costa, Deborah McGregor, and William D. Coleman, 49–79. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press
Feit, Harvey. 2017. “Dialogues on Surviving: Eeyou Hunters' Ways of Engagement with Land, Governments and Youth.” In Entangled Territorialities: Negotiating Indigenous lands in Australia and Canada, ed. Françoise Dussart and Sylvie Poirier, 25–50. Toronto: University of Toronto Press
Frénette, Jacques. 1988. Le pays des Anicinabe. La revendication territoriale globale de la nation Algonquine, Enoncé de revendication documenté et rédigé par le conseil de Bande. Réserve Algonquine de Maniwaka: Miméo
Frénette, Jacques. 1993. “Kitigan Zibi Anishinabeg: le territoire et les activités économiques des Algonquins de la rivière du désert (Maniwaki), 1850–1950.” Recherches amérindiennes au Québec 23(2–3): 39–51
Gagné, Marie-Anik. 1994. A Nation within a Nation: Dependency and the Cree. Montréal: Black Rose Books
Gélinas, Claude. 2000. La gestion de l'Étranger. Les Atikamekw et la présence Eurocanadienne en Haute Mauricie, 1760–1870. Sillery: Éditions du Septentrion
Gélinas, Claude. 2003. Entre l'assommoir et le godendart. Les Atikamekw et la conquête du Moyen-Nord québécois, 1870–1940. Sillery: Éditions du Septentrion
George, Robert, Fikret Berkes, and Richard Preston. 1995. “Aboriginal Harvesting in the Moose River Basin: A Historical and Contemporary Analysis.” Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology / La Revue Canadienne de Sociologie et d'Anthropologie 32(1): 69–90. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1755-618X.1995.tb00835.x
Hallowell, A. Irving. 1949. “The Size of Algonkian Hunting Territories: A Function of Ecological Adjustment.” American Anthropologist 51(1): 35–45. https://doi.org/10.1525/aa.1949.51.1.02a00040
Hallowell, A. Irving. 1951. “Frank Gouldsmith Speck, 1881–1950.” American Anthropologist 53(1): 67–87. https://doi.org/10.1525/aa.1951.53.1.02a00070
Hallowell, A. Irving. 1975. “Ojibwa Ontology, Behaviour, and World View.” In Teachings from the American Earth, ed. Dennis Tedlock and Barbara Tedlock, 141–179. New York: Liveright
Henriksen, Georg. 1973. Hunters in the Barrens: The Naskapi on the Edge of the White Man's World. St. John's: ISER
Henriksen, Georg. 1977. Land Use and Occupancy among the Naskapi of Davis Inlet. Unpublished report for the Naskapi Montagnais Innu Association
Houde, Nicolas. 2011. “Experimenting with What Will Become Our Traditions: Adaptive Co-Management as a Bridge to an Atikamekw Nehirowisiw Post-Treaty World in Nitaskinan, Canada.” PhD dissertation, McGill University
Houde, Nicolas. 2014. “La gouvernance territoriale contemporaine du Nitaskinan: Tradition, adaptation et flexibilité.” Recherches amérindiennes au Québec 44(1): 23–33. https://doi.org/10.7202/1027877ar
Ingold, Tim. 2000. The Perception of the Environment: Essays in Livelihood, Dwelling and Skill. New York: Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203466025
Knight, Rolf. 1968. Ecological Factors in Changing Economy and Social Organization among the Rupert House Cree. Ottawa: National Museum of Canada
La Rusic, Ignatius. 1968. “The New Auchimau.” MA thesis, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, McGill University
Lacasse, Jean-Paul. 1996. “Le territoire dans l'univers innu d'aujourd'hui.” Cahiers de Geographie de Québec 40(110): 185–204. https://doi.org/10.7202/022567ar
Lacasse, Jean-Paul. 2004. Les Innus et le territoire. Innu Tipenitamun. Sillery: Éditions du Septentrion
Leacock, Eleanor. 1954. The Montagnais “Hunting Territory” and the Fur Trade. New York: American Anthropological Association, Memoir n°78. https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.35991
Leroux, Jacques, Roland Chamberland, Edmond Brazeay, and Claire Dubé. 2004. Au pays des peaux de chagrin. Occupation et exploitation territoriales à Kitcisakik (Grand-Lac-Victoria) au XXe siècle. Québec: Presses de l'Université Laval
Leroux, Jacques. 2009. “Éthique et symbolique de la responsabilité territoriale chez les peuples algonquiens du Québec.” Recherches amérindiennes au Québec 39(1–2): 85–97. https://doi.org/10.7202/044999ar
Lips, Julius. 1947. “Naskapi Law.” Transactions of the American Philosophical Society 37(4): 379–492. https://doi.org/10.2307/1005576
Mailhot, José. 1986. “Territorial Mobility among the Montagnais-Naskapi of Labrador.” Anthropologica. 28(1–2): 92–107.
Mailhot, José. 1993. Au Pays des Innus. Les gens de Sheshatshit. Montréal: Presses de Recherches Amérindiennes au Québec
Mailhot, José, and Sylvie Vincent. 1980. Le discours montagnais sur le territoire. Québec: Conseil des Atikamekw et des Montagnais
Morantz, Toby. 1978. “The Probability of Family Hunting Territories in 18th Century James Bay: Old Evidence Newly Presented.” In Proceedings of the 9th Algonquian Conference, ed. William Cowan, 224–236. Ottawa: Carleton University Press
Morantz, Toby. 2002. The White Man's Gonna Getcha: The Colonial Challenge to the Crees in Québec. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press
Morantz, Toby. 2018. “Foreword: Remembering the Algonquian Family Hunting Territory Debate.” Anthropologica 60(1): 10–20
Morissette, Anny. 2007. “Composer avec un système imposé: la tradition et le conseil de bande à Manawan.” Recherches amérindiennes au Québec 37(2–3): 127–138
Mulrennan, Monica. 2015. “Aboriginal Peoples in Relation to Resource and Environmental Management.” In Resource and Environmental Management in Canada: Addressing Conflict and Uncertainty, ed. Bruce Mitchell, 56–79. Toronto: Oxford University Press
Murphy, Robert, and Julian H. Steward. 1956. “Tappers and Trappers: Parallel Process in Acculturation.” Economic Development and Cultural Change 4(4): 335–355. https://doi.org/10.1086/449720
Nadasdy, Paul. 2002. “Property and Aboriginal Land Claims in the Canadian Subarctic: Some Theoretical Considerations. American Anthropologist 104(1): 247–261. https://doi.org/10.1525/aa.2002.104.1.247
Nadasdy, Paul. 2003. Hunters and Bureaucrats: Power, Knowledge and Aboriginal-State Relations in the Southwest Yukon. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press
Nasr, Wren, and Colin Scott. 2010. “The Politics of Indigenous Knowledge in Environmental Assessment: James Bay Crees and Hydroelectric Projects.” In Cultural Autonomy. Frictions and Connections, ed. Petra Rethmann, Imre Szeman, and William D. Coleman, 132–155. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press
Niezen, Ronald. 1993. “Power and Dignity: The Social Consequences of Hydro-Electric Development for the James Bay Cree.” Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology / La Revue Canadienne de Sociologie et d'Anthropologie 30(4): 510–529. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1755-618X.1993.tb00652.x
Niezen, Ronald. 1998. Defending the Land. Sovereignty and Forest Life in James Bay Cree Society. Needham Heights: Allyn and Bacon
Papillon, Martin. 2012. “Les peuples autochtones et la citoyenneté: quelques effets de contradictoires de la gouvernance néolibérale.” Éthique publique 14(1): 2–15
Pasternak, Shiri. 2013. “On Jurisdiction and Settler Colonialism: The Algonquins of Barriere Lake against the Federal Land Claims Policy.” PhD dissertation, University of Toronto
Poirier, Sylvie. 2000. “Contemporanéités autochtones, territoires et (post)colonialisme: réflexions sur des exemples canadiens et australiens.” Anthropologie et Sociétés 24(1): 137–153. https://doi.org/10.7202/015640ar
Poirier, Sylvie. 2001. “Territories, Identity, and Modernity among the Atikamekw (Haut St-Maurice, Québec).” In Aboriginal Autonomy and Development in Northern Québec and Labrador, ed. Colin Scott, 98–116. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press
Poirier, Sylvie. 2004. “The Atikamekw: Reflections on their Changing World.” In Native Peoples: The Canadian Experience, ed. R. Bruce Morrison, and C. Roderick Wilson, 129–152. Toronto: Oxford University Press
Poirier, Sylvie. 2008. “Reflections on Indigenous Cosmopolitics-Poetics.” Anthropologica 50(1):75–85
Poirier, Sylvie. 2010. “Change, Resistance, Accommodation and Engagement in Indigenous Contexts: A Comparative (Canada–Australia) Perspective.” Anthropological Forum 20(1): 41–60. https://doi.org/10.1080/00664670903524202
Poirier, Sylvie. 2013. “The Dynamic Reproduction of Hunter-Gatherers Ontologies and Values.” In A Companion to the Anthropology of Religion, ed. Michael Lambek and Janice Boddy, 50–68. London: Wiley-Blackwell
Poirier, Sylvie. 2017. “Nehirowisiw Territoriality: Negotiating and Managing Entanglement and Coexistence.” In Entangled Territorialities: Negotiating Indigenous Lands in Australia and Canada, ed. Françoise Dussart and Sylvie Poirier, 212–134. Toronto: University of Toronto Press
Poirier, Sylvie, and Jean-Marc Niquay. 1999. Le Droit coutumier Atikamekw: pistes de réflexion. Rapport de recherche, Conseil de la Nation Atikamekw, La Tuque
Preston, Richard. 1986. “Introduction: Reflections on Territoriality.” In “Who Owns the Beaver? Northern Algonquian Land Tenure Reconsidered,” ed. Toby Morantz and Charles Bishop. Special issue, Anthropologica 28(1–2): 11–17. https://doi.org/10.2307/25605190
Preston, Richard. 2002. Cree Narrative. Ottawa: National Museum of Man. First published 1975
Preston, Susan. 2011. “Lifeworlds and Property: Epistemological Challenges to Cree Concepts of Land in the Twentieth Century.” In Property, Territory, Globalization, ed. William D. Coleman, 56–79. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press
Pulla, Siomonn. 2003. “Franck Speck and the Moisie River Incident: Anthropological Advocacy and the Question of Aboriginal Fishing Rights in Quebec.” Anthropologica 45(1):129–145. https://doi.org/10.2307/25606120
Pulla, Siomonn. 2006. “Anthropological Advocacy? Frank Speck and the Mapping of Aboriginal Territoriality in Eastern Canada, 1900–1950.” PhD dissertation, Carleton University
Pulla, Siomonn. 2008. “‘Would You Believe That, Dr. Speck?' Frank Speck and the Redman's Appeal for Justice.” Ethnohistory (Columbus, Ohio) 55(2): 183–201. https://doi.org/10.1215/00141801-2007-060
Pulla, Siomonn. 2011. “A Redirection in Neo-evolutionism? A Retrospective Examination of the Algonquian Family Hunting Territories Debates.” Histories of Anthropology Annual 7(1): 170–190. https://doi.org/10.1353/haa.2011.0003
Richardson, Boyce. 1975. Strangers Devour the Land. Toronto: MacMillan
Roark-Calnek, Susan. 1995. Algonquins of Barriere Lake Toponymy Project. Final report, State University of New York
Roark-Calnek, Susan. 1996. Algonquins of Barriere Lake Social Customs Proiect: Indigenous Knowledge Program. Final report, Algonquins of Barriere Lake Trilateral Secretariat
Salée, Danièle, and Carole Lévesque. 2010. “Representing Aboriginal Self-Government and First Nations/State Relations: Political Agency and the Management of the Boreal Forest in Eeyou Istschee.” International Journal of Canadian Studies 41(41): 99–135. https://doi.org/10.7202/044164ar
Salisbury, Richard F. 1986. A Homeland for the Cree: Regional Development in James Bay, 1971–1981. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press
Samson, Colin. 2003. A Way of Life That Does Not Exist: Canada and the Extinguishment of the Innu. London: Verso
Scott, Colin. 1982. “Production and Exchange among the Wemindji Cree: Egalitarian Ideology and Economic Base.” Culture (Québec) 2(3): 51–64
Scott, Colin. 1984. “Between ‘Original Affluence' and Consumer Affluence: Domestic Production and Guaranteed Income for James Bay Cree Hunters.” In Affluence and Cultural Survival, ed. R.F. Salisbury and E. Tooker, 74–86. Washington: American Ethnological Society
Scott, Colin. 1986. “Hunting Territories, Hunting Bosses and Communal Production among Coastal James Bay Cree.” In “Who Owns the Beaver? Northern Algonquian Land Tenure Reconsidered,” ed. Toby Morantz and Charles Bishop. Special issue, Anthropologica 28(1–2): 163–173
Scott, Colin. 1989. “Knowledge Construction among Cree Hunters: Metaphors and Literal Understanding.” Journal de la Société des Americanistes 75(1): 193–208. https://doi.org/10.3406/jsa.1989.1349
Scott, Colin. 1997 [1988]. “Property Practice and Aboriginal Rights among Quebec Cree Hunters.” In Hunters and Gatherers, vol. 2, Property, Power and Ideology, ed. Tim Ingold, David Riches, and James Woodburn, 35–51. Oxford: Berg
Scott, Colin. 2001. Aboriginal Autonomy and Development in Northern Quebec and Labrador. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press
Scott, Colin. 2004. “Conflicting Discourses of Property, Governance and Development in the Indigenous North.” In In the Way of Development: Indigenous Peoples, Life Projects and Globalization, ed. Mario Blaser, Harvey A. Feit, and Glenn McRae, 299–312. New York: Zed Books
Scott, Colin. 2013. “Le partage des ressources au Québec: perspectives et stratégies autochtones.” In “Les Autochtones et le Québec.” In Des premiers contacts au Plan Nord, ed. Alain Beaulieu, Stéphan Gervais, and Martin Papillon, 363–384. Montréal: Presses de l'Université de Montréal
Scott, Colin. 2017. “The Endurance of Relational Ontology: Encounters between Eeyouch and Sport Hunters.” In Entangled Territorialities: Negotiating Indigenous lands in Australia and Canada, ed. Françoise Dussart and Sylvie Poirier, 51–69. Toronto: University of Toronto Press
Scott, Colin, and James Morrison. 2004. “Frontières et territoires: mode de tenure des terres des Cris de l'Est dans la région frontalière Québec/Ontario – I – Crise et effondrement.” Recherches amérindiennes au Québec 34(3): 23–43
Scott, Colin, and James Morrison. 2005. “Frontières et territoires: mode de tenure des terres des Cris de l'Est dans la région frontalière Québec/Ontario – II – Reconstruction et renouveau.” Recherches amérindiennes au Québec 35(1): 41–56
Speck, Frank G. 1915. “The Family Hunting Band as the Basis of Algonkian Social Organization.” American Anthropologist 17(2): 289–305. https://doi.org/10.1525/aa.1915.17.2.02a00070
Speck, Frank G. 1923. “Mistassini Hunting Territories of the Labrador Peninsula.” American Anthropologist 25(4): 452–471. https://doi.org/10.1525/aa.1923.25.4.02a00030
Speck, Frank G. 1927. “Family Hunting Territories of the Lake St. John and Neighbouring Bands.” ANTHROPOS: International Review of Anthropology and Linguistics 22: 387–403
Speck, Franck, and Loren Eiseley. 1939. “Significance of Hunting Territory Systems of the Algonkian in Social Theory.” American Anthropologist 41(2): 269–280. https://doi.org/10.1525/aa.1939.41.2.02a00080
Tanner, Adrian. 1971. “Existe-t-il des territoires de chasse?” Recherches amérindiennes au Québec 1(4–5): 69–83
Tanner, Adrian. 1979. Bringing Home Animals. Religious Ideology and Mode of Production of the Mistassini Cree Hunters. London: C. Hurst
Tanner, Adrian. 1983. “Algonquian Land Tenure and State Structures in the North.” Canadian Journal of Native Studies 3(2): 311–320
Tanner, Adrian. 1986. “The New Hunting Territory Debate: An Introduction to Some Unresolved Issues.” In “Who Owns the Beaver? Northern Algonquian Land Tenure Reconsidered,” ed. Toby Morantz and Charles Bishop. Special issue, Anthropologica 28(1–2): 19–36
Tsing, Anna. 2005. Friction: An Ethnography of Global Connections. Princeton: Princeton University Press
Viau, Roland. 1995. “L'autopsie d'un contact: 1600–1900.” In Histoire de l'Abitibi-Temiscamingue, ed. Odette Vincent, 123–159. Québec: Institut Québécois de recherche sur la culture
Whiteman, Gail. 1998. “Tallymen Talking: ‘On Work on the Land.' The Cree Tallyman as an Ecologically Embedded Business Manager.” Conference paper, International Association for the Study of the Commons 1998. https://dlc.dlib.indiana.edu/dlc/handle/10535/679
Whiteman, Gail. 2004. “The Impact of Economic Development in James Bay, Canada.” Organization & Environment 17(4): 425–448. https://doi.org/10.1177/1086026604270636
Wyatt, Stephen. 2004. “Co-Existence of Atikamekw and Industrial Forestry Paradigms: Occupation and Management of Forestlands in the St-Maurice River Basin, Québec.” PhD dissertation, Faculté de foresterie et de géomatique, Université Laval
Wyatt, Stephen, and Yvon Chilton. 2014. “L'occupation contemporaine du Nitaskinan par les Nehirowisiwok de Wemotaci.” Recherches amérindiennes au Québec 44(1): 61–72. https://doi.org/10.7202/1027880ar
Téléchargements
Comment citer
Numéro
Rubrique
Licence
Les auteurs qui collaborent avec Anthropologica consentent à publier leurs articles sous la licence Creative Commons Attribution – Utilisation non commerciale 4.0 – International. Cette licence permet à quiconque de partager l’œuvre (reproduire, distribuer et communiquer) et de l’adapter à des fins non commerciales pourvu que l’œuvre soit adéquatement attribuée à son auteur et qu’en cas de réutilisation ou de distribution, les termes de cette licence soient clairement énoncés.
Les auteurs conservent leurs droits d’auteur et accordent à la revue le droit de première publication.
Les auteurs peuvent également conclure des ententes contractuelles additionnelles et séparées pour la diffusion non exclusive de la version de l’œuvre publiée par la revue (par ex. : l’affichage dans un dépôt institutionnel ou la parution dans un livre) qui devra être accompagnée d’une mention reconnaissant sa publication initiale dans cette revue.