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Indigenous
Peoples Specialty Group
Sponsored Session
2009 Annual Meeting
Association of American Geographers
Las Vegas, Nevada; March 22-27, 2009
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Title: |
Native Peoples and the Water Nations II: Policy, Management and Rights |
Description: |
The relationship between native peoples and water is complex and diverse, depending on culture and climate, but is always one of intimacy and respect. Elders speak of the "water nations" as another group with whom societies interact in important and reciprocal ways. But State policies have often seized control of water, changing courses of streams, building dams, allocating water rights, and other practices that interfere both with the course of water and with the relationships that native peoples have to water—from decreasing availability to flooding native lands. Climate change is now exacerbating water issues in many parts of the world, and Indigenous peoples tend to be particularly vulnerable to these changes. This second of two sessiosn presents papers concerned with water management issues and politics.
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Anticipated Attendance: |
100 |
Organizers: |
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Chairs: |
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Participants: |
Presenter: |
Suzanne Smith, First Nation Water Governance in Southern Ontario: Implications for Source Water Protection |
Presenter: |
Dan Walters, Municipal source water protection and First Nations: A two tier system of governance in Ontario, Canada |
Presenter: |
Sarah F. Trainor, Climate Change, Water Impacts, and Indigenous Peoples: Engaging Native Knowledge in Cross-Regional Comparison between Alaska, the Pacific Islands, and the American Southwest |
Presenter: |
Roxanne T. Ornelas, Water Policy and the Indigenous Women's Leadership Project |
Presenter:
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Marcia Macedo, Tropical deforestation and stream connectivity: Implications for the management of indigenous reserves in the Amazon's 'arc of deforestation'. |
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Sponsorships: |
Indigenous Peoples Specialty Group, Water Resources Specialty Group;
Cultural and Political Ecology Specialty Group
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