Ecology and Society (Jun 2009)

Respect for Grizzly Bears: an Aboriginal Approach for Co-existence and Resilience

  • Douglas A. Clark,
  • D. Scott. Slocombe

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5751/ES-02892-140142
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
p. 42

Abstract

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Aboriginal peoples' respect for grizzly bear (Ursus arctos) is widely acknowledged, but rarely explored, in wildlife management discourse in northern Canada. Practices of respect expressed toward bears were observed and grouped into four categories: terminology, stories, reciprocity, and ritual. In the southwest Yukon, practices in all four categories form a coherent qualitative resource management system that may enhance the resilience of the bear-human system as a whole. This system also demonstrates the possibility of a previously unrecognized human role in maintaining productive riparian ecosystems and salmon runs, potentially providing a range of valued social-ecological outcomes. Practices of respect hold promise for new strategies to manage bear-human interactions, but such successful systems may be irreducibly small scale and place based.

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