Native People and the Environmental Regime in the James Bay and Northern Québec Agreement

Authors

  • Evelyn J. Peters

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14430/arctic944

Keywords:

environmental assessment, James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement, land-claim agreements, subsistence economies

Abstract

A major objective of the Cree and Inuit in signing the 1975 James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement was to protect the environment and thus secure their way of life based on harvesting activities. The main elements of the federal, provincial, and Agreement environmental protection regimes are compared with respect to principles derived from the growing literature on indigenous peoples and environmental assessment. The Agreement contained pioneering provisions for environmental assessment; yet those provisions have not met many of the expectations of the Native people. Part of the dissatisfaction derives from the Agreement itself: some sections are vague and difficult to translate into practices; the advisory committee structures are not well suited to Native cultures; and the right to develop is woven throughout the sections on environmental protection. However, failures and delays in implementing the Agreement have also contributed to this dissatisfaction. These issues have implications for the negotiation strategies of other groups.

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Published

1999-01-01