Access to Forest Lands and Resources: The Case of Aboriginal Peoples in Alberta

Date
2008
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Publisher
Canadian Institute of Resources Law
Abstract
The development of natural resources is central to the province of Alberta's economic growth and prosperity. Most of these resources - conventional oil and gas, oil sands, forests, coal, water - are owned by the province. They are managed under a highly centralized resource management regime that provides relatively few opportunities for local communities to influence decision-making. This is notably the case with respect to Crown forests, 89% of which are owned by the provincial government and allocated under long-term forest tenures to large integrated forest companies. The paper focuses on the situation of Aboriginal communities located within the commercial forest area of the province. It seeks to assess the extent and scope of their access to Crown forest lands.
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Citation
Monique Passelac-Ross, Access to Forest Lands and Resources: The Case of Aboriginal Peoples in Alberta, Occasional Paper No. 23 (Calgary: Canadian Institute of Resources Law, 2008)