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Native Canadian daily life in the Northwest Passage context

https://doi.org/10.25587/2310-5453-2023-4-134-146

Abstract

This article explores the connection between the indigenous populations of the North and the Canadian government regarding the Northwest Passage in the Arctic region. The significance of indigenous representation in managing the Northwest Passage is emphasized. The challenges faced by small indigenous groups of the Canadian Arctic are addressed, as well as possible solutions through series of mutually beneficial economic and political proposals. Inuit involvement in the management of marine ecosystem goes beyond Canada’s borders. The Arctic Council has demonstrated that permanent participants from Northern Indigenous communities can significantly influence government, especially on Arctic issues. The days when the Arctic was on the outskirts of global political affairs are gone, as are the days of Canada’s previous passive stance towards its assertions of historically internal waters within the Northwest Passage. Advancing the interests of Indigenous peoples of the North is a well-established Canadian position. The utilization of the Arctic territory by these peoples serves as the backbone of Canada’s Arctic State Policy, consistently articulated by the Government of Canada.

About the Authors

A. V. Mitko
Arctic Public Academy of Sciences; D. I. Mendeleev All-Russian Research Institute of Metrology; Northwestern Institute of Management of the Russian Academy of National Economy and Public Administration
Russian Federation

Mitko Arseniy Valerievich – Candidate of Sciences in Technology, Associate Professor, President of the Arctic Public Academy of Sciences, Associate Professor

St. Petersburg



V. K. Sidorov
Saint-Petersburg University of State Fire Service of the Ministry of Emergency Situations of Russia
Russian Federation

Sidorov Vladimir Konstantinovich – Researcher

St. Petersburg



References

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Review

For citations:


Mitko A.V., Sidorov V.K. Native Canadian daily life in the Northwest Passage context. Arctic XXI Сentury. 2023;(4):134-146. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.25587/2310-5453-2023-4-134-146

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ISSN 2310-5453 (Print)
ISSN 2587-5639 (Online)