Reviews
This volume conveys scholarly information that is balanced with traditional and spiritual knowledge. Academics learning about resource management, agency professionals working with tribes, and tribal scholars will all benefit from this resource.
Book Details
Introduction, by Serra J. Hoagland and Steven Albert
Part I: Background, Policy Issues
1. Diversity of Tribal fish and wildlife programs., by Julie Thorstenson
2. History of the Native American Fish &
Introduction, by Serra J. Hoagland and Steven Albert
Part I: Background, Policy Issues
1. Diversity of Tribal fish and wildlife programs., by Julie Thorstenson
2. History of the Native American Fish & Wildlife Society., by Nathan Jim, Gerald Cobell, Ron Skates, John Antonio, Sally Carufel Williams, Douglas W. Dompier, Ken Poynter, Tamra Jones, Mathis Quintana, Samuel Chischilly, Jovon Jojola, Ashley Carlisle, Julie Thorstenson, Sally Carufel-Williams, and Arthur Blazer
3. Connecting people, science, and culture: an interview with Scott Aiken, Native American Programs Coordinator, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service., by Scott Aikin
4. Who Stands for the River?, by Winona LaDuke
Part II: Legal Issues
5. Tribal consultation: toward meaningful collaboration with the federal government., by Michael Blumm and Lizzy Pennock
6. Tribal water rights: a primer, by Vanessa L. Ray-Hodge and Dylan R. Hedden-Nicely
7. The role of inter-tribal and state-tribal agreements and joint projects in managing and conserving fish resources., by Bethany Berger
8. State regulation and enforcing usufructuary treaty rights., by Guy Charlton
9. The ESA, trust responsibility, and tribal sovereignty., by Steven Albert and Riley Plumer
10. Sinixt hunting: A test of tribal sovereignty, by E. Richard Hart and Cody Desautel
11. We Always Knew; Wetlands (poems)., by nila northSun
Part III: Resource Use, Protection, and Management
12. The Indigenous Sentinel Network: community-based monitoring to enhance food security., by Lauren Divine, Bruce Robson, Christopher Tran, Paul I. Melovidov, and Aaron P. Lestenkof
13. The Indigenous Guardians Network for Southeast Alaska., by Michael I. Goldstein, Aaron Poe, Raymond E. Paddock III, and Bob Christensen
14. Glyph (poem)., by Kimberly Blaeser
15. Endangered leopard frog and tundra swan management., by Kari Eneas, Dale Becker, and Arthur M. Soukkala
16. Management of migratory birds and subsistence use., by Patty Schwalenberg, Liliana Naves, Lara Mengak, James Fall, Thomas C. Rothe, Todd Sformo, Julian J. Fischer, and David E. Safine
17. Research with Tribes: A suggested framework for the co-production of knowledge., by Caleb Hickman, Julie Thorstenson, Ashley Carlisle, Serra J. Hoagland, and Steven Albert
18. Thoughts of an Ojibwe Poet on Wildlife Management., by Marcie Rendon
19. The Navajo Nation wildlife management (Interview)., by Gloria Tom
20. Shash (short story)., by Ramona Emerson
21. A model for stewardship: The Lower Brule Sioux Tribal Wildlife Department., by Shaun Grassel
22. Reclaiming ancestral lands and relationships to the plants and animals: an interview with Chief James Floyd., by James R. Floyd and Janisse Ray
23. Using fire to promote wildlife habitat and first foods (Interview)., by Vern Northrup
24. Partnerships Are the Key to Conservation for the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians, by Mitzi Reed
25. Burmese Python Impacts and Management on the Miccosukee Reservation, Florida., by Craig van der Heiden and William Osceola
26. So Many Things That Humble Me., by John Sewell
27. Swamp boy's pet and field guide (memoir)., by Chip Livingston
28. Weaving a Cherokee future., by Andrea Rogers
29. The Lakota traditional stewardship model., by Richard T. Sherman and Michael Brydge
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., by Gary Paul Nabhan, Lorraine Marquez Eiler, Amadeo Rea, Eric Mellink, and Lawrence Stevens
31. How Traditional Ecological Knowledge informs the field of conservation biology., by Sarah E. Rinkevich and Crystal (Ciisquq) Leonetti
32. Yurok Traditional Ecological Knowledge as related to elk management and conservation., by Juliana Suzukawa, Seafha Ramos, and Tiana Williams-Claussen
33. Elk and the Yurok People., by Seafha Ramos and James Gensaw Sr.
34. Power Parade, by Serra J. Hoagland