Fishing rights are one of the major areas of dispute for Aboriginals in Canada and many other countries today. Dianne Newell explores this controversial issue and looks at the intricate and changing ways government regulatory policy and the law have affected First Nations’ participation in the Pacific Coast fisheries. Along the way, she relates the history of Aboriginal fisheries and their management, charts the development of industrial fishing and fish processing in British Columbia, and examines the contemporary legal landscape in Canada regarding the Aboriginal right to fish.
Record details
ISBN:0802077463 (pbk.)
ISBN:0802005470 (bound)
ISBN:9780802077462 (pbk.)
ISBN:9780802005472 (bound)
Physical Description:xiii, 306 p. : ill., maps ; 24 cm. print
Publisher:Toronto : University of Toronto Press, c1993.
Content descriptions
Bibliography, etc. Note:
Includes bibliographical references (p. [255]-279) and index.
Formatted Contents Note:
Introduction: The politics of resource regulation -- The Aboriginal salmon fishery and its management -- Indian fishery invented, 1971-1888 -- Indian labour captured, 1889-1918 -- Battling a revolving door, 1919-1945 -- Cast adrift, 1946-1968 -- Rights reconsidered: From the Davis plan to sparrow, 1969-1993 -- Vanishing alternatives: Halibut and herring -- Conclusion: Indians versus conservation? -- Bibliography -- Index -- Illustration credits.