Flames, forests and hope
From coast to coast, Indigenous-led efforts are underway to save our remaining wilderness. We bring...
Since time immemorial, Indigenous Peoples have cared for their homelands and lived in balance with their surroundings.
Although Indigenous people comprise only five per cent of the global population, they steward 80 per cent of the Earth’s biodiversity. Across what is commonly called Canada, Indigenous Peoples are defending some of the most unique, irreplaceable and fragile ecosystems from degradation and destruction.
Indigenous-led conservation initiatives have become a cornerstone of Canada’s plans to protect 25 per cent of its land and water by 2025, and 30 per cent by 2030. Since 2018, they have received more than a billion dollars in federal funding. As the catastrophic consequences of climate change pile up and biodiversity plummets, these initiatives are more critical than ever.
But Indigenous-led conservation is about more than safeguarding the lands and waters. It’s also about expressing and sustaining rights, language, culture, knowledge and relationships to the unique spirit of each protected and conserved place.
In Spirits of Place we’ll explore the many ways Indigenous communities and nations are enacting their responsibilities to their lands, waters and future generations — big and small, ancient and new, independently and in partnership — and what those efforts mean for all of us.
This coverage is made possible by funding from Metcalf Foundation and MakeWay Foundation. As per The Narwhal’s editorial independence policy, the foundations have no editorial input.
From coast to coast, Indigenous-led efforts are underway to save our remaining wilderness. We bring...
Squirrel Island is being returned to its rightful owners. But between an abandoned dump, lack...
Ninety per cent of the hemlock trees in Nova Scotia could disappear. A Mi’kmaw-led effort...
‘It’s a good step towards mending our relationship’: a growing network of reciprocity trusts allow...
Awarded for protecting sea life, Gitdisdzu Lugyeks Marine Protected Area is also the first ever...
On the shores of James and Hudson Bays, the Omushkego Wahkohtowin conservation project is almost...
The air is biting cold as Willie Bertacco navigates his motorboat through the blackness that...
A marine conservation area covering 16,791 square kilometres of ocean off the Nunatsiavut coast has...
Canada gave $1.33 million to the Métis Nation of Ontario to protect land. But not...
In his childhood, Elder Luschiim (Arvid Charlie) remembers the Cowichan and Koksilah rivers teeming with salmon — chinook and coho, chum and steelhead — so...
Continue reading