2021
DOI: 10.1177/10860266211042659
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Abstract: The institutional frameworks that Indigenous groups put in place to govern economic processes within their communities are critical to the advancement of their diverse cultural-ecological, social, and economic development goals. Through the lens of institutional logics, this article examines the ways in which First Nations community sawmill enterprises in British Columbia, Canada, navigate the sectoral demands brought by a productivist paradigm of forestry. We find that First Nations community sawmill enterpri… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(3 citation statements)
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References 63 publications
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“…We use a comparative case study approach (Yin, 1994), which draws upon our experiences as practitioners working with Yuneŝit'in, TNG and other First Nations communities across British Columbia, Canada and which utilizes multiple-methods and available research materials to develop our analysis. First, we utilize the results of eighteen interviews conducted as a part of a previous study on First Nations Community Sawmill Enterprises (Persaud et al, 2021), drawing upon responses specifically related to housing and economic processes. To preserve anonymity, these interviewees are identified numerically (Interviewees 1-18).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…We use a comparative case study approach (Yin, 1994), which draws upon our experiences as practitioners working with Yuneŝit'in, TNG and other First Nations communities across British Columbia, Canada and which utilizes multiple-methods and available research materials to develop our analysis. First, we utilize the results of eighteen interviews conducted as a part of a previous study on First Nations Community Sawmill Enterprises (Persaud et al, 2021), drawing upon responses specifically related to housing and economic processes. To preserve anonymity, these interviewees are identified numerically (Interviewees 1-18).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the uptake of such a right remains limited given that many First Nations have been forced to accept existing forest management systems and the constrained institutional logics of commercial efficiency and productivism which drive them (Pache and Santos, 2010; Wyatt, 2008). As a result, many believe that reform of British Columbia's forest tenure system could also offer new opportunities for First Nations to obtain greater access to territorial forest resources and to create forestry-related enterprises that are more compatible with their visions for housing and economic futures (Annie L. Booth and Skelton, 2011a; Passelac-Ross and Smith, 2013; Persaud et al, 2021). Regardless of such possible institutional changes, the (de)commoditization of timber will inevitably result in financial versus social value trade-offs that can only be reconciled through a certain level of ethical decision making.…”
Section: (De) Commoditizationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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