Lands and Resources for Jobs: How Aboriginal Peoples Strategically Use Environmental Assessments to Advance Community Employment Aims

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Lands and Resources for Jobs: How Aboriginal Peoples Strategically Use Environmental Assessments to Advance Community Employment Aims
Abstract
This paper examines whether environmental assessments (EAs) influence the ability of Aboriginal peoples to advance community employment aims in resource development projects. Environmental assessment and labour policy and practices have been conventionally understood as distinct processes. Our investigations demonstrate that EAs play a significant, if indirect, role in Aboriginal efforts to regulate resource sector work. While Aboriginal communities increasingly rely upon private negotiations with development proponents to secure resource sector employment, participation in EA processes provides Aboriginal peoples a space to negotiate language around employment commitments and leverage to secure Aboriginal employment provisions in impact benefit agreements with project proponents.
Publication
Canadian Public Policy
Volume
42
Issue
2
Pages
212-223
Date
June 2016
Language
en
Short Title
Lands and Resources for Jobs
Accessed
7/18/19, 5:00 AM
Loc. in Archive
world
Library Catalog
Citation
McCreary, T., Mills, S., & St-Amand, A. (2016). Lands and Resources for Jobs: How Aboriginal Peoples Strategically Use Environmental Assessments to Advance Community Employment Aims. Canadian Public Policy, 42(2), 212–223. https://doi.org/10.3138/cpp.2015-061