Indigenous Mapping Bibliography

Indigenous mapping bibliography

Overview

We have reviewed many insightful, important and effective books, articles, and reports on ethnographic mapping and Indigenous cartographies (and indeed some less effective or even problematic approaches).  We are sharing our ongoing bibliography of this material as a way to promote research that builds on this important work that has gone before.  This list is by no means comprehensive, but it should provide a good baseline for interested researchers.

This was last substantively updated in Summer 2021. As publications continue to emerge, we will work to update our records.  Please notify us if there are errors, omissions or suggestions for changes and we will endeavour to include those on the next revision of the bibliography.

How to Use

The resource list is sectioned by category, then alphabetically to make browsing easier. To use, simply click on a category heading to view the related sources. Many entries have links embedded to aid you finding online, on Google Scholar/Google Books, or within academic library catalogues or databases.  If the links do not work (particularly for scholarly works), we recommend viewing while logged in to your library’s system.

 

Academic Theses and Dissertations

Belanger, Yale Deron. 2000. Saulteaux Land Use within the Interlake Region of Manitoba, 1842-1871. Master of Arts in Native Studies, University of Manitoba.  

Bennet, Trevor Dixon. 2012. Monitoring Environmental Conditions Using Participatory Photo-mapping with Inuvialuit Knowledge Holders in the Mackenzie Delta Region, Northwest Territories. Masters of Arts Thesis, University of Victoria.

Bill, Laren. 2006. “Traditional Land-Use and Occupancy Study of Cahcakiwsakahikan (Pelican Lake) First Nation: A Woodland Cree Community in Northern Saskatchewan.” Manitoba.

Bonnell, Jennifer L. 1999. Mapping Songs, Mapping Histories: The Negotiation of Cultural Perspectives on Gitxsan Territory. Master of Arts in Interdisciplinary Studies and School of Environmental Studies, University of Victoria.

Bunn, Desiree. 2015. The Choreography of Cartography: Disembodied Mappings of an Embodied Landscape.Master of Landscape Architecture, University of Manitoba.

Deutsch, Nathan. 2015. Engaging Provincial Land Use Policy: Traplines and the Continuity of Customary Access and Decision-Making Authority in Pikangikum First Nation, Ontario. Master of Natural Resource Management, University of Manitoba.  

Eades, Gwilym Lucas. 2010. Goeweb: Indigenous Mapping of Intergenerational Knowledge. Doctor of Philosophy, Department of Geography, McGill University.

Griebel, Brenda. 2013. Recharting the Courses of History: Mapping Concepts of Community, Archaeology, and Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit in the Canadian Territory of Nunavut. Doctoral Dissertation, University of Toronto.

Hrenchuk, Carl. 1991. South Indian Lake Land Use and Occupancy : Kayas Akwa Wapahki. Master of Natural Resource Management, University of Manitoba.

Laren, Bill. 2006. Traditional Land-use and Occupancy Study of Cahcakiwsakahikan (Pelican Lake) First Nation : A Woodland Cree Community in Northern Saskatchewan. Master of Natural Resource Management, University of Manitoba.

MacDonald, Ian. 1995. The Community of Cross Lake, Manitoba : an Analysis of Resource Use and Land Occupancy. Master of Natural Resource Management, University of Manitoba.

Markey, Nola M. 1996. Data “Gathering Dust”: An Analysis of Traditional Use Studies conducted within Aboriginal Communities in British Columbia. Master of Arts in Anthropology, Simon Fraser University.

Moka, Apiti. 2018. “Cartography for Maori Communities in a Changing Technilogical World: The Evolutiion of GIS within the Treaty of Waitangi Settlement Process.” New Zeland: Waikato.

Nola M., Markey. 2001. “DATA ‘Gathering Dust’: An Analysus of the Traditional Use Studies Conducted within Abiriginal Communities in British Columbia.” canada: Simon Fraser

Pecket, Marilyn. 1999. Anishnabe Homeland History, Traditional Land and Resource Use of Riding Mountain, Manitoba. Master of Natural Resource Management, University of Manitoba.

Peterson, Katherine Anne. 2015. Charting a New Course: Collaborative Environmental Health Mapping with the Isga Nation in Alberta, Canada. Master of Environment, University of Manitoba.

Pulla, Siomonne. 2006. Anthropological Advocacy?: Frank Speck and the Mapping of Aboriginal Territoriality in Eastern Canada, 1900-1950. Doctoral Dissertation, Carleton University.

Ratuski, Sheldon Christopher Lee. 2014. Cultural Landscapes of the Common Ground: Mapping Traditional Anishinaabe Relationships to the Land. Masters of Natural Resources Management. University of Manitoba.

Spalding, Pamela. 1988. Representation, Authority and Relevance of Anthropology: A Case Study of Cultural Representation in Public Land and Resource Management in British Columbia. Master of Arts in Anthropology, University of Victoria.

Spink, John. 1969. Eskimo Maps from the Canadian Eastern Arctic. Master of Arts, University of Winnipeg.

Stock, Karen. 1996. The Traditional Land-use of the Waterhen First Nation vis-a-vis a Forest Management Plan. University of Manitoba.

Wilson, Emily. 2006. Gendered Geographies and Participatory Processes: Mapping Natural Resource Use with Wapichan Women in Southern Guyana. Masters of Arts Thesis, Carleton University.

 

 

Books, Journals and Reports Primarily for Scholarly Audiences

Abrams, Janet and Peter Hall (Eds). 2006. Else/Where: Mapping New Cartographies of Networks and Territories. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.

Almeida (Vasconcellos) R. 2001. Cartography and Indigenous Populations: A Case Study With Brazilian Indians From the Amazon Region. Proceedings of the 20th International Cartographic Conference Beijing, China

Almeida, R., Gavazzi, R. 2011. Ethnocartography and Native People in Acre, Brazil - Experiences With Participatory Mapping. Proceedings of the 25th International Cartographic Conference Paris, France.

Andersson, Ruben. 2016. Here Be Dragons: Mapping an Ethnography of Global Danger 57 (6): 25.

Anker, Kirsten. 2005. The Truth in Painting: Cultural Artefacts as Proof of Native Title  9: 91–125.

———. 2018. Aboriginal Title and Alternative Cartographies. ELR, no. 1: 17. 

Antunes, Pedro, and Paula André. 2006. A Conceptual Framework For the Design of Geo-Collaborative Systems. Group Decision and Negotiation 15 (3): 273-95.

Ansell, Shaun, and Jennifer Koenig. 2011. CyberTracker: An Integral Management Tool Used by Rangers in the Djelk Indigenous Protected Area, Central Arnhem Land, Australia 12 (1): 13.

Anthias, Penelope. 2019. Ambivalent Cartographies: Exploring the Legacies of Indigenous Land Titling through Participatory Mapping. Critique of Anthropology 39 (2): 222–42. 

———. n.d. “Ambivalent Cartographies: Exploring the Legacies of Indigenous Land Titling through Participatory Mapping.” Critique of Anthropology 0 (0): 1–21. 

Aporta, Claudio. 2014. Chapter 16 – The Gwich’in Atlas: Place Names, Maps, and Narratives. In Developments in the Theory and Practice of Cybercartography, 229–44. 

Aporta, Claudio. 2014. Inuit Oral Maps: Describing the Land with Words. In Mapping Native America: Cartographic Interactions between Indigenous Peoples, Government, and Academia, Volume 3. Eds. Daniel G. Cole and Imre Sutton, copyright Daniel G. Cole.

———. 2009. The Trail As Home: Inuit and their Pan-Arctic Network of Routes. Human Ecology 37:131-46

———. 2011. Shifting Perspectives On Shifting Ice: Documenting and Representing Inuit Use of the Sea Ice. Canadian Geographer / Le Géographe Canadien 55 (1): 6-19.

Aporta, C., Taylor, D.R.F., Laidler, G.J. 2011. Geographies of Inuit Sea Ice Use: Introduction. The Canadian Geographer 55(1): 1-5.

Aporta, Claudio, and Eric Higgs. 2005. Satellite Culture: Global Positioning Systems, Inuit Wayfinding, and the Need For A New Account of Technology. Current Anthropology 46 (5) (12/01): 729-53.

Asch, Michael, Thomas D. Andrews, and Shirleen Smith. 1986. The Dene Mapping Project On Land Use and Occupancy: An Introduction in Anthropology in Praxis: Occasional Papers in Anthropology and Primatology., Ed. Philip Spaulding, 36-43. Calgary, AB: University of Calgary.

Auld, James, and Robert Kershaw. 2005. The Sahtu Atlas: Maps and Stories from the Sahtu Settlement Area in Canada’s Northwest Territories. Norman Wells, N.W.T.: Sahtu GIS Project.

Barrett, S. A. 1908. the Ethno-Geography of the Pomo and Neighboring Indians. Berkeley: University of California Press.

Bashkow, I. 2004. A Neo-Boasian Conception of Cultural Boundaries. American Anthropologist 106 (3): 443-58.

Bauer, Kenneth. 2009. On the Politics and the Possibilities of Participatory Mapping and GIS: Using Spatial Technologies to Study Common Property and Land Use Change Among Pastoralists in Central Tibet. Cultural Geographies 16 (2) (04): 229-52.

Becker, Amy. 2014. The Stz’uminus Storied Places Project: A Community-Based Digital Mapping Project to Mobilize Indigenous Place Names and Place-Based Stories. The Arbutus Review: 5(1).

Beamer, B Kamanamaikalani, and T Kaeo Duarte. 2009. I Palapala No Ia Aina - Documenting the Hawaiian Kingdom: A Colonial Venture? Journal of Historical Geography 35: 66–86. 

Beamer, Kamanamaikalani and T. Kaeo Duarte. 2014. I Palapala No Ia Aina -- Documenting the Hawaiian Kingdom: A Colonial Venture? In Mapping Native America: Cartographic Interactions between Indigenous Peoples, Government, and Academia, Volume 3. Eds. Daniel G. Cole and Imre Sutton, copyright Daniel G. Cole. [reprint from Journal of Historical Geography, 35 (2009): 66-86.]

Berh, t., Machelak, S., Spak, S., Hazelboxer, J. 2014. Kinder Morgen Trans Mountain Pipeline Expansion.

Berry, Kate. 2008.Introduction: Mainstreaming Indigenous Geography. American Indian Culture and Research Journal  32 (3): 1–4.

Bird, Beverly. 1995. The EAGLE Project: Re-mapping Canada from an Indigenous Perspective. Cultural Survival Quarterly 18 (4): 23.

Boas, Franz. 1934. Geographical Names of the Kwakiutl Indians. New York: Columbia University Press.

Bolster, Heath. 2003. Guide to Using Traditonal Use Study Information. ministry of sustainable ressource managment.

Boria, Edoardo, and Tania Rossetto. 2017. The Practice of Mapmaking: Bridging the Gap between Critical/Textual and Ethnographical Research Methods. Cartographica: The International Journal for Geographic Information and Geovisualization 52 (1): 32–48.

Brattland, Camilla. 2010. Mapping Rights in Coastal Sami Seascapes. Arctic Review On Law and Politics 1 : 28-53.

Brauen, Glenn, Stephanie Pyne, Amos Hayes, Jean-Pierre Fiset, and D R Fraser Taylor. 2011. Encouraging Transdisciplinary Participation Using an Open Source Cybercartographic Toolkit: The Atlas of the Lake Huron Treaty Relationship Process 65 (1): 27–45.

Braund, Stephen, R. 2010. Subsistence Mapping of Nuiqsut, Kaktovik, and Barrow.

Brealey, Ken G. 1995. Mapping them `Out': Euro-Canadian Cartography and the Appropriation of the Nuxalk and Ts’ilhqot’in First Nations’ Territories, 1793-1916. Canadian Geographer 39 (2) (Summer95): 140.

———. 2010. Historical Geography of Cowichan Land Use and Occupancy Lower Fraser River: Map Series and Report. Prepared For Woodward and Company and the Cowichan Tribes. University College of the Fraser Valley.

Brennan-Horley, C, Susan Luckman, Chris Gibson & Julie Willoughby-Smith. 2010.GIS, Ethnography, and Cultural Research: Putting Maps Back Into Ethnographic Mapping. the Information Society: An International Journal. 26(2): 92-103.

Bret Gustafson. 2009. Manipulating Cartographies: Plurinationalism, Autonomy, and Indigenous Resurgence in Bolivia. Anthropological Quarterly 82 (4): 985–1016.

Brien J. and Wood, D. 2015. The Birth of Indigenous Mapping in Canada. In Weaponizing Maps, 54–73 and 194–207. New York: The Guilford Press.

Brightman, Marc. 2012. Maps and Clocks in Amazonia: the Things of Conversion and Conservation. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 18 (3): 554-71.

Brody, Hugh. 1981. Maps and Dreams: Indians and the British Columbia Frontier. Vancouver: Douglas & Mcintyre.

Brody, Hugh. 1981. The Indian’s Map. In Maps and Dreams, 146–77.

Brooke, Lorraine F. 1993. An Inventory of Mapping Projects in Connection With Aboriginal Land and Resource Use in Canada, Royal Commission On Aboriginal Peoples, History Workshop, February 26-28.

Bryan, Joe. 2009. Where Would We Be Without them? Knowledge, Space and Power in Indigenous Politics. Futures 41 (1) (2): 24-32.

———. 2011. Walking the Line: Participatory Mapping, Indigenous Rights, and Neoliberalism. Geoforum 42 (1): 40-50. 

Caqaurd, Sébastien. 2013. Cartography II: Collective Cartographies in the Social Media Era. Progress in Human Geography 38 (1): 141-150.

Caquard, Sébastien, Stephanie Pyne, Heather Igloliorte, Krystina Mierins, Amos Hayes, and D R Fraser Taylor. 2009. A ‘Living’ Atlas for Geospatial Storytelling: The Cybercartographic Atlas of Indigenous Perspectives and Knowledge of the Great Lakes Region 44 (2): 83–100.

———. 2011. Cartography I: Mapping Narrative Cartography. Progress in Human Geography.

Caquard, Sébastien and Jean-Pierre Fiset. 2013. How Can We Map Stories? A Cybercartographic Application For Narrative Cartography. The Journal of Maps 10 (1): 18-25.

Caqaurd, Sébastien, H. Pyne, K. Igliorite, A. Mierins, A. Hayes, and D.R.F. Taylor. 2009. A ‘Living’ Atlas For Geospatial Storytelling: the Cybercartographic Atlas of Indigenous Perspectives and Knowledge of the Great Lakes Region. Cartographica 44(2): 83-100.

Chambers, Kimberlee, Jonathan Corbett, C. Keller, and Colin Wood. 2004. Indigenous Knowledge, Mapping, and GIS: A Diffusion of Innovation Perspective. Cartographica: the International Journal For Geographic Information and Geovisualization 39 (3): 19-31.

Chapin, Mac, Zachary Lamb, and Bill Threlkeld. 2005. Mapping Indigenous Lands. Annual Review of Anthropology 34 (1) (10/01): 619-38.

Cloud, John. 2014. The Tlingit Map of 1869: A Masterwork of Indigenous Cartography. In Mapping Native America: Cartographic Interactions between Indigenous Peoples, Government, and Academia, Volume 3. Eds. Daniel G. Cole and Imre Sutton, copyright Daniel G. Cole. [revised from Expedition, 54, 2 (2012): 10-18.]

Clow, Richmond L. 2014. The Tribal Land Enterprise of the Rosebud Sioux. In Mapping Native America: Cartographic Interactions between Indigenous Peoples, Government, and Academia, Volume 3. Eds. Daniel G. Cole and Imre Sutton, copyright Daniel G. Cole.

Cole, Daniel G. 2014. Federal Cartographic Views of American Indian Lands over Time. In Mapping Native America: Cartographic Interactions between Indigenous Peoples, Government, and Academia, Volume 1. Eds. Daniel G. Cole and Imre Sutton, copyright Daniel G. Cole.

Cole, Daniel G., and Imre Sutton, eds. 2014a. Mapping Native America: Cartographic Interactions between Indigenous Peoples, Government, and Academia. North Charleston, SC: CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform.

———, eds. 2014b. Mapping Native America: Cartographic Interactions between Indigenous Peoples, Government, and Academia. North Charleston, SC: CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform.

Coombes, Brad, Jay T. Johnson, and Richard Howitt. 2012.Indigenous Geographies I: Mere Resource Conflicts? The Complexities in Indigenous Land and Environmental Claims. Progress in Human Geography 36 (6): 810-21.

Coombes, Brad, Jay T. Johnson, and Richard Howitt. 2013. Indigenous Geographies II: The Aspirational Spaces in Postcolonial Politics – Reconciliation, Belonging and Social Provision. Progress in Human Geography 37 (5): 691–700. 

Coombes, Brad, Nicole Gombay, Jay T Johnson, and Wendy S Shaw. 2011a. The Challenges of and from Indigenous Geographies. In A Companion to Social Geography, Blackwell Publisiong Ldt, 473–88.

Coombes, Brad, Nicole Gombay, Jay T. Johnson, and Wendy S. Shaw. 2011b. The Challenges of and from Indigenous Geographies. In A Companion to Social Geography, edited by Vincent J. Del Casino, Mary E. Thomas, Paul Cloke, and Ruth Panelli, 472–89. Oxford, UK: Wiley-Blackwell.

Corbett, Jonathan M., Tim Kulchyski, and C. Peter Keller. 2006. Using Community Information Systems to Express Traditional Knowledge Embedded in the Landscape. Participatory Learning and Action 54 (Special Issue On "Mapping For Change-Practice Technologies and Communication"): 21-7.

Cowell, Andrew. 2004. Arapaho Placenames in Colorado: Indigenous Mapping, White Remaking. Names 52 (1): 21-41.

Crampton, J. 2001. Maps As Social Constructions: Power, Communication, and Visualization. Progress in Human Geography 25(2): 235-252.

Cronkleton, Peter, Marco Antonio Albornoz, Grenville Barnes, Kristen Evans, and Wil De Jong. 2010. Social Geomatics: Participatory Forest Mapping to Mediate Resource Conflict in the Bolivian Amazon.Human Ecology 38 (1): 65-76.

Cutler, Jennifer, Jeanette Dorner, Justin Hall, Georgiana Kautz, Kristina Phelps, David Troutt, George Walter (edited by Christopher Ellings, Joe Kane, Emmet O’Connell, Bill Tobin). 2014. Case Studies in Tribal Environmental Management: Cartography and Geographic Information Systems at the Nisqually Department of Natural Resources. In Mapping Native America: Cartographic Interactions between Indigenous Peoples, Government, and Academia, Volume 3. Eds. Daniel G. Cole and Imre Sutton, copyright Daniel G. Cole.

De Vorsey Jr., Louis. 2014. Silent Witness: Native American Maps. In Mapping Native America: Cartographic Interactions between Indigenous Peoples, Government, and Academia, Volume 3. Eds. Daniel G. Cole and Imre Sutton, copyright Daniel G. Cole. [reprint from The Georgia Review, XLVI: 4 (1992): 709-726.

Deh Cho First Nation and Cizek P. 2004. Using Land Use and Occupancy Mapping and GIS to Establish Protected Area Network In the Deh Cho Territory.

———. 2014. The Cherokee Removal and Georgia Land Lottery Maps. In Mapping Native America: Cartographic Interactions between Indigenous Peoples, Government, and Academia, Volume 1. Eds. Daniel G. Cole and Imre Sutton, copyright Daniel G. Cole.

Desbiens, Caroline, Étienne Rivard, Université de Saint-Boniface, and Irène Hirt. 2017. Remembranzas del territorio: la Geografía quebequense delante la memoria autóctona 60 (173): 22.

DeWitt, Donald L. 2014. Indian Territory: A Checklist of Representative Maps. In Mapping Native America: Cartographic Interactions between Indigenous Peoples, Government, and Academia, Volume 1. Eds. Daniel G. Cole and Imre Sutton, copyright Daniel G. Cole.

Di Giminiani, Piergiorgio. 2015. The Becoming of Ancestral Land: Place and Property in Mapuche Land Claims: The Becoming of Ancestral Land. American Ethnologist 42 (3): 490–503.

Diver, Sibyl. 2017. Negotiating Indigenous Knowledge at the Science-Policy Interface: Insights from the Xáxli’p Community Forest. Environmental Science & Policy 73 (July): 1–11.

Dobbs, G Rebecca. 2015. “Geospatial Technologies and Indigenous Communities Engagement” 6 (1): 4–13.

Dunn, Christine E. 2007. Participatory GIS - A People's GIS? Progress in Human Geography 31 (5): 616-37.

Eades, G.L. 2015. The Evolution of Critical Cartographic Inscription. In Maps and Memes, McGill-Queen’s University Press, 122–39.

Eades, Gwilym. 2013. Toponymic Constraints in Wemindji. The Canadian Geographer. 58 (2): 233-43.

Ederer, Veronika. 2003. Maps and Illusions Notes On Ethnographic Maps of North America. European Review of Native American Studies 17 (1): 37-46.

Edmunds, Thomas-Slayter, D., Rocheleau, B., Dianne. 1995. Gendered Ressource Mapping: Focusing on the Women’s Spaces in the Landsacape.

Ellana, Linda, George Sherrod, and Steven Langdon. 1985. Subsistence Mapping: An Evaluation and Methodological Guidelines. Alaska Department of Fish and Game, Division of Subsistence. Technical Paper No. 125. Juneau.

Engler, Nate J, Teresa Scassa, and D R Fraser Taylor. 2013a. Mapping Traditional Knowledge: Digital Cartography in the Canadian North 48 (3): 189–99. 

Engler, Nate J., Teresa Scassa, and D.R. Fraser Taylor. 2013b. Mapping Traditional Knowledge: Digital Cartography in the Canadian North. Cartographica: The International Journal for Geographic Information and Geovisualization 48 (3): 189–99.

Ens, Ej. 2012. Monitoring Outcomes of Environmental Service Provision in Low Socio-Economic Indigenous Australia Using Innovative CyberTracker Technology. Conservation and Society 10 (1): 42.

Erueti, Andrew. 2006. The Demarcation of Indigenous Peoples' Traditional Lands: Comparing Domestic Principles of Demarcation With Emerging Principles of International Law. Arizona Journal of International and Comparative Law 23 (3): 543-613.

Etherington, Norman. 2003. Genocide By Cartography: Secrets and Lies in Maps of the South-Eastern African Interior, 1830-1850. In Disputed Territories: Land Culture and Identity in Settler Societies., Eds. David Trigger, Gareth Griffiths, 207-232. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press.

Éthier, Benoit. 2020. The Canadian Geographer / Le Géographe Canadien, 1–17.

Ettenger, Kreg. 2006. Negotiating Maps: How Local Knowledge Becomes Regional Policy. Cornell University.

Favrholdt, Kenneth. 2014. Colonization, Decolonization and Mapping of the Homelands of the Interior Salish of British Columbia, Canada. In Mapping Native America: Cartographic Interactions between Indigenous Peoples, Government, and Academia, Volume 1. Eds. Daniel G. Cole and Imre Sutton, copyright Daniel G. Cole.

Ferguson, T.J.E., Richard Hart and Ronald L. Stauber. 2014. Cartography and Zuni Litigation. In Mapping Native America: Cartographic Interactions between Indigenous Peoples, Government, and Academia, Volume 2. Eds. Daniel G. Cole and Imre Sutton, copyright Daniel G. Cole.

Forrester, John, and Steve Cinderby. n.d. A Guide to Using Community Mapping and Participatory-GIS.

Fortin, Marcel, and Jennifer Bonnell, eds. 2014. Historical GIS Research in Canada. Canadian History and Environment Series 2. Calgary: University of Calgary Press.

Fox, Jefferson, Pralad Yonzon, and Nancy Podger. 1996. Mapping Conflicts Between Biodiversity and Human Needs in Langtang National Park, Nepal. Conservation Biology 10 (2): 562-9.

Fraser Taylor, D. R., and Sébastien Caquard. 2006. Cybercartography: Maps and Mapping in the Information Era. Cartographica: the International Journal For Geographic Information and Geovisualization 41 (1): 1-6.

Freeman, Milton. 1976. (Ed.) Fieldwork Methodology, Rationale and Assessment. in Inuit Land Use and Occupancy Project, Volume Two: Supporting Studies, Pp. 47-59. Prepared For the Department of Indian and Northern Affairs. Ottawa: Minister of Supply and Services Canada

———. 1976. Inuit Land Use and Occupancy Project. Ottawa: Minister of Supply and Services Canada.

———. 2011. Looking Back—and Looking Ahead—35 Years After the Inuit Land Use and Occupancy Project. Canadian Geographer / Le Géographe Canadien 55 (1): 20-31.

Gagnon J. and Desbiens C. 2017. Mapping Memories in a Flooded Landscape: A Place Reenactment Project in Pessamit. Université Laval, 1–36.

Gagnon, Justine. 2020. De la carte au territoire: Portée et usages des outils cartographiques au sein de la Première Nation des Pekuakamiulnuatsh Entrevue avec Michel Nepton, membre de la Première Nation des Pekuakamiulnuatsh et conseiller en aménagement du territoire. The Canadian Geographer / Le Géographe canadien 64 (1): 10–19.

Gavazzi, R. 2012. Agroforestry and Indigenous Cartography: Territorial and Environmental Management in the Hands of Agroforestry Native Agents of Acre State (in Portuguese, With Maps and Images). University of Sao Paulo, SP, Brazil.

Georgette, Susan and Attamuk Shiedt. 2005. Whitefish: Traditional Ecological Knowledge and Subsistence Fishing in Kotzebue Sound Region, Alaska. Alaska Department of Fish and Game, Division of Subsistence, and Maniilaq Association. Technical Paper No. 290. Kotzebue.

Glon, Éric. 2013. Cartographie participative autochtone et réappropriation culturelle et territoriale, 29–42.

Gribb, William J and Daniel G. Cole. 2014. The Use of GIS to Analyze the Native American Tribal Information from the Lewis and Clark Corps of Discovery.  In Mapping Native America: Cartographic Interactions between Indigenous Peoples, Government, and Academia, Volume 1. Eds. Daniel G. Cole and Imre Sutton, copyright Daniel G. Cole.

Gribb, William J. 2014. Land Alienation of Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa. In Mapping Native America: Cartographic Interactions between Indigenous Peoples, Government, and Academia, Volume 1. Eds. Daniel G. Cole and Imre Sutton, copyright Daniel G. Cole.

Goeman, Mishuana. 2013. Mark My Words: Native Women Mapping our Nations. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.

Haberfield, Steve. 2014. The Timbisha Quest for Land. In Mapping Native America: Cartographic Interactions between Indigenous Peoples, Government, and Academia, Volume 3. Eds. Daniel G. Cole and Imre Sutton, copyright Daniel G. Cole.

Hale, Charles. 2006. Activist Research V. Cultural Critique: Indigenous Land Rights and the Contradictions of Politically Engaged Anthropology. Cultural Anthropology 21 (1): 96-120.

Harley, J.R. 1990. Cartography, Ethics and Social Theory. Cartographica: The International Journal for Geographic Information and Geovisualization 27 (2): 1–23.

Hart, Richard E. 2014. The West Boundary of the Hualapai Indian Reservation. In Mapping Native America: Cartographic Interactions between Indigenous Peoples, Government, and Academia, Volume 2. Eds. Daniel G. Cole and Imre Sutton, copyright Daniel G. Cole. [revised from Western Legal History, 21: 2 (2008): 121-163.]

Herlihy, Peter H. 2003. Participatory Research Mapping of Indigenous Lands in Darién, Panama. Human Organization 62 (4) (12/01): 315-31.

Herlihy, Peter H., and Gregory Knapp. 2003. Maps of, by, and for the Peoples of Latin America. Human Organization 62 (4) (12/01): 303-14.

Herman, R. 2008. Reflections On the Importance of Indigenous Geography. American Indian Culture and Research Journal 32 (3) (01/01): 73-88.

Hershey, Robert Alan, Jennifer McCormack, and Gillian E Newell. 2014. Mapping Intergenerational Memories (Part 1): Proving the Contemporary Truth of the Indigenous Past.  University of Arizona.

Hirt, Irène. 2009. Cartographies autochtones. Éléments pour une analyse critique. Espace géographique 38 (2): 171

———. 2012. “Mapping Dreams/Dreaming Maps: Bridging Indigenous and Western Geographical Knowledge.” Cartographica: The International Journal for Geographic Information and Geovisualization 47 (2): 105–20.

Hodgson, Dorothy L., and Richard A. Schroeder. 2002.Dilemmas of Counter-Mapping Community Resources in Tanzania. Development and Change 33 : 79-100.

Huggan, Graham. 1991. Maps, Dreams, and the Presentation of Ethnographic Narrative: Hugh Brody's 'Maps and Dreams' and Bruce Chatwin's 'the Songlines'. ARIEL: A Review of International English Literature 22 (1): 57-69.

Hurt, Douglas A. 2014. Cartographic Influences on the Shaping of a Creek (Muscogee) Homeland in Indian Territory. In Mapping Native America: Cartographic Interactions between Indigenous Peoples, Government, and Academia, Volume 2. Eds. Daniel G. Cole and Imre Sutton, copyright Daniel G. Cole.

Isogai, Andrea, Leonard JS Tsuji, Daniel D. Mccarthy, Holly L. Gardner, Jim D. Karagatzides, Skye Vandenberg, Christine Barbeau, Nadia Charania, Vicky Edwards, and Don Cowan. 2013. Examining the Potential Use of the Collaborative-Geomatics Informatics Tool to Foster Intergenerational Transfer of Knowledge in A Remote First Nation Community. Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, the 42 (1): 44-57.

Jobst, Markus, and Springerlink Ebook Collection. 2010. Preservation in Digital Cartography: Archiving Aspects. Berlin: Springer Berlin Heidelberg.

Johnson, Jay T, Renee Pualani Louis, and Albertus Hadi Pramono. 2006. Facing the Future: Encouraging Critical Cartographic Literacies In Indigenous Communities. Facing the Future 4 (1): 81–98.

Joly, Tara L. 2018a. “Ethnographic Refusal in Traditional Land Use Mapping_ Consultation, Impact Assessment, and Sovereignty in the Athabasca Oil Sands Region” 5 (2): 335–43.

———. 2018b. Ethnographic Refusal in Traditional Land Use Mapping_ Consultation, Impact Assessment, and Sovereignty in the Athabasca Oil Sands Region. The Extractive Industries and Society, 9.

Jørgensen, Finn Arne. 2014. What Happens to a Place When the Data About It Is Lost? The Atlantic, 3.

Kayahna Tribal Area Council. 1985. The Kayhana Region Land Utilization and Occupancy Study. University of Toronto Press. Big Trout Lake, Ontario.

Keith, D., Angulalik, M. 2000. Iqaluktuuttiaq Place Name Project. Field Report For the Kitikmeot Heritage Society.

Keller, C. Peter, Kimberlee J. Chambers, Jonathan Corbett, and Colin J. Wood. 2004. Indigenous Knowledge, Mapping, and GIS: A Diffusion of Innovation Perspective. Cartographica 39 (3): 19.

Kelly, John, Peter Herlihy, Taylor Tappan, Andrew Hilburn, and Matthew Fahrenbruch. 2017. From Cognitive Maps to Transparent Static Web Maps: Tools for Indigenous Territorial Control in La Muskitia, Honduras. Cartographica: The International Journal for Geographic Information and Geovisualization 52 (1): 1–19.

Kerski, Joseph. 2014. Mapping for Understanding Community, Region, and the World: Using GIS in Native Education. In Mapping Native America: Cartographic Interactions between Indigenous Peoples, Government, and Academia, Volume 3. Eds. Daniel G. Cole and Imre Sutton, copyright Daniel G. Cole.

Keski-Säntti, Jouko, Ulla Lehtonen, Pauli Sivonen, and Ville Vuolanto. 2003. The Drum As Map: Western Knowledge Systems and Northern Indigenous Map Making. Imago Mundi 55 (1): 120-5.

Kiplang'at, Joseph, and Daniel Chebutuk Rotich. 2012. Mapping and Auditing Agricultural Indigenous Knowledge in Kenya: A Case Study of the Uasin Gishu and Keiyo Districts. Innovation (44): 81-100.

Kitchin, R. Dodge, M. 2007. Rethinking Maps. Progress in Human Geography. 31(3) 331-344.

Krahe, Diane L. 2014. Mapping Indian Wilderness: An Untenable Exercise in Paternalism. In Mapping Native America: Cartographic Interactions between Indigenous Peoples, Government, and Academia, Volume 3. Eds. Daniel G. Cole and Imre Sutton, copyright Daniel G. Cole.

Kriz, Karel, William Cartwright, and Lorenz Hurni. 2010. Mapping Different Geographies. Heidelberg: Springer.

Krupnik, I., Aporta, C., Gearhead, S., Laidler, G.J., Kiesel-Holm, L. (Eds). 2010. SIKU: Knowing Our Ice, Documenting Inuit Sea Ice Knowledge and Use. Dordrecht, New York: Springer.

Kurgan, Laura. 2013. Close Up at A Distance: Mapping, Technology and Politics. Cambridge: Zone.

Kuwanwisiwma, Leigh J. and T.J. Ferguson. 2014. Hopitutskwa: The Meaning and Power of Maps. In Mapping Native America: Cartographic Interactions between Indigenous Peoples, Government, and Academia, Volume 3. Eds. Daniel G. Cole and Imre Sutton, copyright Daniel G. Cole.

Laidler, G.J., Elee, P. 2008. Human Geographies of Sea Ice: Freeze/Thaw Processes Around Igloolik, Nunavut, Canada. Polar Record 44(229): 127-153.

Laidler, G.J., Elee, P., Ikummaq, T., Joamie, E., Aporta, C. 2010. Mapping Inuit Sea Ice Knowledge, Use and Change in Nunavut, Canada (Cape Dorset, Igloolik, and Pangnirtung). in: Krupnik, I., Aporta, C., Gearhead, S., Laidler, G.J., Kiesel-Holm, L. (Eds). 2010. SIKU: Knowing Our Ice, Documenting Inuit Sea Ice Knowledge and Use. Springer, Netherlands, Pp. 47-81.

Larsen, Soren. 2012. Toward An Open Sense of Place” Phenomenology, Affinity, and the Question of Being. Annals of the Association of Geographers 102(3): 632-46.

Lassiter, Luke E. 2005. The Chicago Guide to Collaborative Ethnography. Chicago Guides to Writing, Editing, and Publishing. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Lauriault, T.P., Taylor, D.R.F. 2005. Cybercartography and the New Economy: Collaborative Research in Action. in: Taylor D.R.F. (Ed.) Cybercartography: theory and Practice. Elsevier, Amsterdam, pp.181-210.

Lewis, Malcom. 1998. Cartographic Encounters: Perspectives On Native American Mapmaking and Map Use. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Lilomaiava-Doktor. 2020. Oral Traditions, Cultural Significance of Storytelling, and Samoan Understandings of Place or Fanua. Native American and Indigenous Studies 7 (1): 121.

Louis, R.P. 2007. Can You Hear Us Now? Voices From the Margin: Using Indigenous Methodologies in Geographic Research. Geographical Research 45(2): 130-139.

———. 2004. Indigenous Hawaiian Cartographer: in Search of Common Ground. Cartographic Perspectives(48): 7-23.

Louis, Renee Pualani, Jay T. Johnson, and Albertus Hadi Pramono. 2012. Introduction: Indigenous Cartographies and Counter-Mapping. Cartographica: the International Journal For Geographic Information and Geovisualization 47 (2): 77-9.

Lucchesi, Annita Hetoevėhotohke’e. 2018. ‘Indians Don’t Make Maps’: Indigenous Cartographic Traditions and Innovations. American Indian Culture and Research Journal 42 (3): 11–27.

Luscombe, B.W., Reyes, C. 2004. Building Consensus in Environmental Decision Making: A Methodology Integrating GIS Tools and Structured Communication. Paper Read at the 29th Annual Conference On the National Association of Environmental Professionals (NAEP), 25-28 April Portland, OR.

MacEachren, Alan. 2004. How Maps Work: Representation, Visualization, and Design. New York: Guilford

Magowan, Fiona. 2001. Syncretism Or Synchronicity? Remapping the Yolgnu Feel of Place. Australian Journal of Anthropology 12 (3): 275-90.

Marsden, Susan. 1997. Review of Archival Materials For Information Pertaining to Tsimshian User and Occupation of the Nass River Area; Greenville to Kincolith Highway Section. Publication Unknown.

Martin, Richard J., and David Trigger. 2015. Negotiating Belonging: Plants, People, and Indigeneity in Northern Australia: Negotiating Belonging. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 21 (2): 276–95

Matthieu Noucher, Irène Hirt, and Xavier Arnauld de Sartre. 2019. Mises en chiffres, mises en cartes, mises en ordre du monde, 2–20.

McCarthy, Daniel D. P., Zachariah General, Jeff Liedtke, Celine Sutherland, Paulo Alencar, Leonard J. S. Tsuji, Graham S. Whitelaw, Et Al. 2012. Collaborative Geomatics and the Mushkegowuk Cree First Nations: Fostering Adaptive Capacity For Community-Based Sub-Arctic Natural Resource Management. Geoforum 43 (2): 305-14.

McGurk, Thomas J., and Sébastien Caquard. 2020. To What Extent Can Online Mapping Be Decolonial? A Journey throughout Indigenous Cartography in Canada. The Canadian Geographer / Le Géographe Canadien 64 (1): 49–64.

McIlwraith, Thomas, and Raymond Cormier. 2015. Land Use and Occupancy Studies, Counter-Mapping, and the Supreme Court of Canada’s Tsilhqot’in Decision 188: 35–54.

McTavish, Anne K and Nancy Lee Wilkinson. 2014. Critical Cartography and the Case of the Winnemem Wintu. In Mapping Native America: Cartographic Interactions between Indigenous Peoples, Government, and Academia, Volume 2. Eds. Daniel G. Cole and Imre Sutton, copyright Daniel G. Cole.

Meadows, William. 2014. “We want our land as it is”: Black Goose’s Map as an Example of Kiowa Political Cartography. In Mapping Native America: Cartographic Interactions between Indigenous Peoples, Government, and Academia, Volume 3. Eds. Daniel G. Cole and Imre Sutton, copyright Daniel G. Cole.

Michael J. Heckenberger. 2009. Mapping Indigenous Histories: Collaboration, Cultural Heritage, and Conservation in the Amazon. Collaborative Anthropologies 2 (1): 9-32.

Middleton, Elisabeth Rose. 2010. Seeking Spatial Representation: Reflections On Participatory Ethnohistorical GIS Mapping of Maidu Allotment Lands. Ethnohistory 57 (3): 363-87.

Monmonie, Mark. 2006. From Squaw Tit to Whorehouse Meadow: How Maps Name, Claim and Inflame. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Mulrennan, Monica E., Rodney Mark, and Colin H. Scott. 2012. Revamping Community-Based Conservation through Participatory Research: Revamping Community-Based Conservation through Participatory Research. The Canadian Geographer / Le Géographe Canadien 56 (2): 243–59

Mundy, Barbara. 1996. The Mapping of New Spain: Indigenous Cartography and the Maps of Relaciones Geograficás. University of Chicago Press.

Murphyao, Amanda. 2015. Unsettling Settler Belonging: (Re)Naming and Territory Making in the Pacific Northwest 45 (3): 18.

Natcher, David C. 2001. Land Use Research and the Duty to Consult: A Misrepresentation of Aboriginal Landscape. Land Use Policy 18 (2001) 113-122.

Neleman, Hans. 2014. Should Google Be Mapping Tribal Lands, 4.

O’Rourke, Michael JE. 2018. The Map Is Not the Territory: Applying Qualitative Geographic Information Systems in the Practice of Activist Archaeology. Journal of Social Archaeology 18 (2): 149–73.

O’Rourke, Karen. 2013. Walking and Mapping: Artists As Cartographers. Cambridge: MIT Press.

Offen, Karl H. 2003. Narrating Place and Identity, Or Mapping Miskitu Land Claims in Northeastern Nicaragua. Human Organization 62 (4) (12/01): 382-92.

Olson R. and Kuntz J. 2016. Edii Gots’o Gogohh Where We Were Born. thcho research & training institute.

Olson, Rachel, Jeffrey Hackett, and Steven DeRoy. 2016. Mapping the Digital Terrain: Towards Indigenous Geographic Information and Spatial Data Quality Indicators for Indigenous Knowledge and Traditional Land-Use Data Collection. The Cartographic Journal 53 (4): 348–55.

Orlove, Benjamin. 1991. Mapping Reeds and Reading Maps: the Politics of Representation in Lake Titicaca. American Ethnologist 18 (1): 3-38.

Oyono, Rene, Peter Mobile, Marina France and Solange Bandiaky. 2010. Mapping Communities, Mapping Rights: Participatory Community Mapping As Rights Contestation in Cameroon. Policy Matters: 17 Pp 156-160.

Özden-Schilling, Tom. 2019. Cartographies of Consignment: First Nations and Mapwork in the Neoliberal Era. Anthropological Quarterly 92 (2): 541–73.

Palmer, Mark. 2012a. Cartographic Encounters at the Bureau of Indian Affairs Geographic Information System Center of Calculation. American Indian Culture and Research Journal 36 (2): 75–102. 

———. 2012b. Theorizing Indigital Geographic Information Networks. Cartographica: The International Journal for Geographic Information and Geovisualization 47 (2): 80–91. 

———. 2012. Theorizing Indigital Geographic Information Networks. Cartographica 47:2 Pp 80-91.

Parker, Brenda. 2006. Constructing Community Through Maps? Power and Praxis in Community Mapping. Professional Geographer 58 (4): 470-84.

Pearce, Margaret Wickens, and Renee Pualani Louis. 2008. Mapping Indigenous Depth of Place. American Indian Culture and Research Journal 32 (3): 107-26.

Pelto, P. 2013. Mapping: A Powerful Tool in Ethnographic Research  -- and -- Social Mapping and Sketch Mapping: Getting the Lay of the Land. In Applied Ethnography, Guidelines for Fielf Research, 251–65 and 74–85. Walnut Creek, Canada: Left Coast Press.

Peluso, Nancy l. 2005. Seeing Property in Land Use: Loczl Territorializations in West Kalimantan, Indonesia 105 (1): 1–15.

Peluso, Nancy. 1995.“Whose Woods Are these? Counter-Mapping Forest Territories in Kalimantan, Indonesia.” Antipode 27 (4): 383-406.\

Peter A. Walker and Pauline E. Peters. 2001. Maps, Metaphors, and Meanings: Boundary Struggles and Village Forest Use on Private and State Land in Malawi. Society & Natural Resources 14 (5): 411–24.

Pickles, J. 2006. On the Social Lives of Maps and the Politics of Diagrams: A Story of Power, Seduction and Disappearance. Area 38 (3), 347-350

Preci, Alberto. 2020. Fixing the Territory, a Turning Point: The Paradoxes of the Wichí Maps of the Argentine Chaco. The Canadian Geographer / Le Géographe Canadien 64 (1): 20–31.

Pualani Louis, Renee, Jay T. Johnson and Albertus Hadi Pramono. 2012. Introduction: Indigenous Cartographies and Counter-Mapping. Cartographica. 47:2 Pp 77-79

Pulla, Siomonn P. 2016. Critical Reflections on (Post)Colonial Geographies: Applied Anthropology and the Interdisciplinary Mapping of Indigenous Traditional Claims in Canada during the Early 20th Century. Human Organization 75 (4): 289–304.

Pulsifer, P.L., Laidler, G.J., Taylor, D.R.F., Hayes, A. 2010. Creating An Online Cybercartographic Atlas of Inuit Sea Ice Knowledge and Use. in: Krupnik, I., Aporta, C., Gearhead, S., Laidler, G.J., Kiesel-Holm, L. (Eds). 2010. SIKU: Knowing Our Ice, Documenting Inuit Sea Ice Knowledge and Use. Springer, Netherlands, pp. 229-254.

———. 2011. Towards An Indigenist Data Management Program: Reflections On Experiences Developing An Atlas of Sea Ice Knowledge and Use. The Canadian Geographer 55 (1): 108-124.

Pyne, S. 2009. Spatializing History: the Cybercartographic Atlas of the Lake Huron Treaty Process. in: Hele, K. (Ed.), This Is Indian Land: the Robinson Huron Treaties of 1850.

Pyne, Stephanie, and D.R. Fraser Taylor. 2012. Mapping Indigenous Perspectives in the Making of the Cybercartographic Atlas of the Lake Huron Treaty Relationship Process: A Performative Approach in a Reconciliation Context. Cartographica: The International Journal for Geographic Information and Geovisualization 47 (2): 92–104.

Radcliffe, Sarah A. 2017. Geography and Indigeneity I: Indigeneity, Coloniality and Knowledge. Progress in Human Geography 41 (2): 220–29.

Rambaldi, Giacomo, Julius Muchemi, Nigel Crawhall, and Laura Monaci. 2007. Through the Eyes of Hunter-Gatherers: Participatory 3D Modelling Among Ogiek Indigenous Peoples in Kenya. Information Development 23 (2-3): 113-28.

Ramirez-Gomez, Sara O. I., Gregory G. Brown, and Annette Tjon Sie Fat. 2013. Participatory Mapping With Indigenous Communities For Conservation: Challenges and Lessons From Suriname. Electronic Journal of Information Systems in Developing Countries 58 : 23-46.

Riewe, Rick. 1991. Inuit Land Use Studies and the Native Claims Process. in Aboriginal Resource Use in Canada: Historical and Legal Aspects., Ed. Abel, Kerry & Jean Friesen, 287-299. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba Press.

Ritter, John T. 1976. Kutchin Place-Names: Evidence of Aboriginal Land Use. Dene Rights 3 (3): 111-35. Yellowknife: Indian Brotherhood of the Northwest Territories.

Roberts, Les. 2012. Mapping Cultures: Place, Practice, Performance. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan Ltd.

Rocheleau Dianne, Barbara Thomas-Slayter, David Edmunds. 1995. Gendered Resource Mapping: Focusing on Women’s Spaces in the Landscape. Cultural Survival Quarterly, 18(4), pp.62-68.

Robertson, Breece and Charles F. Sams III. 2014. The Quinault Nation Maps Its Future: A Northwest Tribal Nation Emerges from a 130-Year-Old Mapping Dispute with a GIS Plan to Help It Reclaim Lost Lands. In Mapping Native America: Cartographic Interactions between Indigenous Peoples, Government, and Academia, Volume 3. Eds. Daniel G. Cole and Imre Sutton, copyright Daniel G. Cole.

Rosano, Michela. n.d. “Indigenous Rights Activist and 60s Scoop Survivor Colleen Cardinal Discusses Her Project to Map the Indigenous Adoptee Diaspora,” 4.

Roth, Robin. 2009. The Challenges of Mapping Complex Indigenous Spatiality: From Abstract Space to Dwelling Space. Cultural Geographies 16 (2) (04): 207-27.

Ruek, Daniel. 2014. “I Do Not Know the Boundaries of This Land, But I Know the Land Which I Worked”: Historical GIS and Mohawk Land Practices. in Historical GIS Research in Canada pp. 129-152.

Rundstrom, R. A. GIS, Indigenous Peoples, and Epistemological Diversity. Cartography and Geographic Information Systems 22 (1): 45-57.

Scassa, T. 2013. Legal Issues With Volunteers Geographic Information. The Canadian Geographer. 57, 1-10.

Scassa, T., Engler, N.J., Taylor, D.R.F., Forthcoming. Legal Issues in Mapping Traditional Knowledge: Digital Cartography in the Canadian North. Cartographica Journal.

Scassa, T., Taylor, D.RF., Lauriault, T.P., Engler, N. 2013. Ethical Mapping of Traditional Knowledge Through Template Licenses. Presentation to the Associate of American Geographers Conference, April 13.

Scholz, Luca. 2019. “Deceptive Contiguity: The Polygon in Spatial History.” Cartographica: The International Journal for Geographic Information and Geovisualization 54 (3): 206–16.

Scott, C. and Nasr, W. 2010. The Politics of Indigenous Knowledge in Environmental Assessment: James Bay Crees and Hydroelectric Projects. In Cultural Autonomy: Frictions and Connections, UBC Press, 135–64. 

Sieber, Renee. 2006. Public Participation Geographic Information Systems: A Literature Review and Framework. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 96 (3): 491-507.

Sletto, Bjørn. 2009. 'Indigenous People Don't Have Boundaries': Reborderings, Fire Management, and Productions of Authenticities in Indigenous Landscapes. Cultural Geographies 16 (2) (04): 253-77.

Sletto, Bjørn Ingmunn. 2009. We Drew What We Imagined’: Participatory Mapping, Performance, and the Arts of Landscape Making. Current Anthropology 50 (4): 443–76.

———. 2009. "We Drew What We Imagined Participatory Mapping, Performance, and the Arts of Landscape Making. Current Anthropology 50 (4): 443-76.

———.  2009. Special Issue: Indigenous Cartographies. Cultural Geographies 16 (2) (04): 147-52.

Smith, Cecilia. 2020. Ethics and Best Practices for Mapping Archaeological Sites. Advances in Archaeological Practice 8 (2): 162–73.

Smith, Derek A., Alicia Ibáñez, and Francisco Herrera. 2017. The Importance of Context: Assessing the Benefits and Limitations of Participatory Mapping for Empowering Indigenous Communities in the Comarca Ngäbe-Buglé, Panama. Cartographica: The International Journal for Geographic Information and Geovisualization 52 (1): 49–62.

Smith, Derek A. 2003. Participatory Mapping of Community Lands and Hunting Yields Among the Buglé of Western Panama. Human Organization 62 (4) (12/01): 332-43.

Smith, Laura. 2014. Indigenous Geography, GIS and Land-Use Planning on the Bois Forte Reservation. In Mapping Native America: Cartographic Interactions between Indigenous Peoples, Government, and Academia, Volume 3. Eds. Daniel G. Cole and Imre Sutton, copyright Daniel G. Cole. [reprint from the American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 32, 3 (2009): 139-151.]

———. 2008.Indigenous Geography, GIS, and Land-Use Planning On the Bois Forte Reservation. American Indian Culture and Research Journal 32 (3) (01/01): 139-52.

Smith, Richard Chase, Margarita Benavides, Mario Pariona, and Ermeto Tuesta. 2003. Mapping the Past and the Future: Geomatics and Indigenous Territories in the Peruvian Amazon. Human Organization62 (4) (12/01): 357-68.

Sterritt, Neil, Susan Marsden, Robert Galois, Peter Grant, and Richard Overstall. 1998. Tribal Boundaries in the Nass Watershed. Vancouver: UBC Press.

Stevens, A. 2008. A Different Way of Knowing: Tools and Strategies For Managing Indigenous Knowledge. Libri 58, 25-33.

Stocks, Anthony. 2003. Mapping Dreams in Nicaragua's Bosawas Reserve. Human Organization 62 (4) (12/01): 344-56.

Stone, Adam. 2018. Mapping Experience: Age and Indigeneity as Mediating Factors in Users’ Experiences with the Algonquian Linguistic Atlas. Cartographica: The International Journal for Geographic Information and Geovisualization 53 (4): 229–40.

Street, Booth. n.d. Her Majesty the Queen in Right of Canada, 2010 For More Information about the GeoConnections Program and the Canadian Geospatial Data Infrastructure (CGDI) or for Additional Copies of This Document, Contact:, 44.

Sutton, Imre. 2014. Mapping Land Tenure and Territoriality: Diagrammatic Mapping Examples. In Mapping Native America: Cartographic Interactions between Indigenous Peoples, Government, and Academia, Volume 2. Eds. Daniel G. Cole and Imre Sutton, copyright Daniel G. Cole.

Sutton, Imre. 2014. Tribal Land Claims: The Role of Maps. In Mapping Native America: Cartographic Interactions between Indigenous Peoples, Government, and Academia, Volume 2. Eds. Daniel G. Cole and Imre Sutton, copyright Daniel G. Cole.

Syncretism or Sychronicity & #63; Remapping the Yolngu Feel of Place. n.d., 16.

Taylor, Anne, ed. 2012. Tribal GIS: Supporting Native American Decision Making. Redlands, Calif: Esri Press.

Taylor, D.R. Fraser, and Stephanie Pyne. 2010. The History and Development of the Theory and Practice of Cybercartography. International Journal of Digital Earth 3 (1): 2–15.

———. 2012. Mapping Indigenous Perspectives in the Making of the Cybercartographic Atlas of the Lake Huron Treaty Relationship Process: A Performative Approach in A Reconciliation Context. Cartographica 47 (2): 92-104.

Tebetta Foundation. 2015. Mapping Our Lands & Waters, Protecting Our Future. Global Conference on Community Participatory Mapping in Indigenous Peoples’ Territories. Tebetta Foundation, Baguio City, Philippines. 

Thom, Brian. 2009. The Paradox of Boundaries in Coast Salish Territories. Cultural Geographies 16 (2) (04): 179-205.

———. 2013. Unsettling the Cartographic Record: Anthropology in the Salish Sea. Invited Paper (Pecha Kucha) For Unsettling Records Session organized by Andrea Walsh and Lisa Mitchell at the Annual Meetings of the Canadian Anthropology Society, Victoria, 8-11 May 2013.

Tollett, Thomas E. 2014. Our Place in the World: The Citizen Potawatomi Nation. In Mapping Native America: Cartographic Interactions between Indigenous Peoples, Government, and Academia, Volume 3. Eds. Daniel G. Cole and Imre Sutton, copyright Daniel G. Cole.

Tsuji, Leonard J. S., Harry Manson, and Kelly Cooper. 2005. Utilization of Land Use Data to Identify Issues of Concern Related to Contamination at Site 050 of the Mid-Canada Radar Line. Canadian Journal of Native Studies XXV (2): 491-527.

Turnbull, D. 2007. Maps, Narratives, and Trails: Performativity, Hodology and Distributed Knowledges in Complex Adaptive Systems: An Approach to Emergent Mapping. Geographical Research 45, 140-149.

Turnbull, David. 1997. Reframing Science and Other Local Knowledge Traditions. Futures 29 (6): 551–62.

Vermeylen, Saskia, Gemma Davies, and Dan van der Horst. 2012. Deconstructing the Conservancy Map: Hxaro , N!Ore , and Rhizomes in the Kalahari. Cartographica: The International Journal for Geographic Information and Geovisualization 47 (2): 121–34.

Wainwright, Joel, and Joe Bryan. 2009. Cartography, Territory, Property: Postcolonial Reflections On Indigenous Counter-Mapping in Nicaragua and Belize. Cultural Geographies 16 (2) (04): 153-78.

Walker, PA, and PE Peters. 2001. Maps, Metaphors, and Meanings: Boundary Struggles and Village Forest Use On Private and State Land in Malawi. Society & Natural Resources 14 (5): 411-24.

Warf, Barney, and Daniel Sui. 2010. From GIS to Neogeography: Ontological Implications and theories of Truth. Annals of GIS 16 (4): 197-209.

Weinstein, Martin. 1993. Aboriginal Land Use and Occupancy Studies in Canada. Comox, BC: M.S. Weinstein Consulting Services.

———. 1997. Getting to Use in Traditional Use Studies: A Paper Presented to the Society For Applied Anthropology Annual Meeting: March 4-9. Seattle.

———. 1998. Sharing Information Or Captured Heritage: Access to Community Geographic Knowledge and the State's Responsibility to Protect Aboriginal Rights in Canada, Seventh Conference of the International Association For the Study of Common Property June 9-14. Vancouver, BC.

Wickens Pearce, Margaret.2014. The Holes in the Grid: Reservation Surveys in Lower Michigan. In Mapping Native America: Cartographic Interactions between Indigenous Peoples, Government, and Academia, Volume 1. Eds. Daniel G. Cole and Imre Sutton, copyright Daniel G. Cole. [reprint: Michigan Historical Review, 30 (2) (2004): 135-166.]

Willow, Anna J. 2013. Doing Sovereignty in Native North America: Anishinaabe Counter-Mapping and the Struggle for Land-Based Self-Determination. Human Ecology 41 (6): 871–84.

Wimmer, Andreas. 2008. The Making and Unmaking of Ethnic Boundaries: A Multilevel Process Theory. American Journal of Sociology 113 (4): 970–1022.

Wood, D., Fels, J., Krygier, J., 2010. Rethinking the Power of Maps. Guilford Press, New York.

Younker, Jason. 2014. Lost Map, Lost Identity, and the Resilient Coquille Indians. In Mapping Native America: Cartographic Interactions between Indigenous Peoples, Government, and Academia, Volume 3. Eds. Daniel G. Cole and Imre Sutton, copyright Daniel G. Cole.

 

 

Methodological Guides

Amazon Conservation Team Brazil. 2008. Methodology of Collaborative Cultural Mapping. ACT Brazil.

Armitage, Peter and Stephen Kilburn. 2015. Conduct of Traditional Knowledge Research: A Guide. Wildlife Management Advisory Council, North Slope. Whitehorse, YK, Canada. 

DeRoy, Steven. 2014.Direct-to-Digital Mapping Methodology using Google Earth: Guidebook. The Firelight Group Research Cooperative.  January, 2016

Elias, Peter Douglas. 2004. Standards for Aboriginal Cultural Research in Forest Management Planning in CanadaPrepared for Canada’s Model Forest Network Aboriginal Strategic Initiative Project ASI-03/04-003. Calgary, AB. 

Flavelle, Alix. 2002. Community Mapping Handbook: Mapping our Land. A Guide to Making Maps of our own Communities and Traditional Lands. Edmonton: Lone Pine Publishing.

Government of Alberta, Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development. 2003. Best Practices Handbook for Traditional Use Studies. Edmonton, AB.

Government of Canada. 2010. Good Practices Guide: Success in Building and Keeping an Aboriginal Mapping Program. Centre for Indigenous Environmental Resources. Prepared for GeoConnections Natural Resources Canada. Ottawa, ON.

Poole, Peter. 2003. Cultural Mapping and Indigenous Peoples: A Report for UNESCO. Publication Unknown.

Tobias, Terry. 2000. Chief Kerry's Moose: A Guidebook to Land Use and Occupancy Mapping, Research Design and Data Collection. Vancouver: Union of BC Indian Chiefs and Ecotrust Canada.

Tobias, Terry N., Union of British Columbia Indian Chiefs, and Ecotrust Canada. 2009. Living Proof: The Essential Data-Collection Guide for Indigenous Use-and-Occupancy Map Surveys. Vancouver, BC: Ecotrust Canada.

 

Reports Produced Primarily for Professional and Community Government Audiences

Candler, Craig, Rachel Olson, Steven DeRoy and the Firelight Group Research Cooperative with the Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation and Mikisew Cree First Nation. 2010. As Long as the Rivers Flow: Athabasca River Knowledge Use and Change. Parkland Institute, University of Alberta.

ERM Rescan. 2014. Brucejack Gold Mine Project: Tsetsaut/Skii km Lax Ha Nation Traditional Knowledge and Traditional Use Report. Prepared for Pretium Resources Inc. by ERM Rescan: Vancouver, British Columbia.

Calliou Group. 2011. Gitxaala Nation Use Study: Enbridge Northern Gateway Environmental Use Study. Prepared for Enbridge Northern Gateway Pipelines Project and National Energy Board.

Dandurand, Tony, Heidi Heder, Helen Joe, Ryan Ross and Ann Stevenson. 1996. Stave River/Lake Traditional Use Study. Prepared For the Ministry of Environment, Lands and Parks and B.C. Hydro. Stolo Nation, Chilliwack, BC.

Dewhirst, John. 2003. Aboriginal Use and Occupation of Canoe Passage and the Lower South Arm of the Fraser River, BC. Prepared For: Agents For the Attorney General of Canada.,.

Gateway Environmental Management Team. 2007. Enbridge Gateway Pipelines Project. Traditional Knowledge Community Report: Alexander First Nation. Prepared for Enbridge Gateway Pipelines Inc.

Golder and Associates. 2011. Shell Jackpine Mine Expansion & Pierre River Mine Project: Submission of Additional Traditional Knowledge and Traditional Land Use Information to the Joint Review Panel. Submitted to Shell Canada, September 2011.

Hartwig, L. 2011. Mapping Traditional Knowledge Related to the Identification of Ecologically and Biologically Significant Areas in the Beaufort Sea. Canadian Manuscript Report of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 2895.

Firelight Group Research Cooperative. 2011. Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation Integrated Knowledge and Use Report and Assessment for Shell Canada’s Proposed Jackpine Mine. Submitted to Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation Industry Relations Corporation.

———. 2012. Mikisew Cree First Nation Indigenous Knowledge and Use Report and Assessment for Shell Canada’s Proposed Jackpine Mine, Pierre River Mine, and Redclay Compensation Lake. Submitted to the Mikisew Cree First Nation Government Industry Relations.

Firelight Group Research Cooperative with Georgina Chocolate of the Tłı̨chǫ Government. 2012. Asì Edee T’seda Dìle: Tłı̨chǫ Nation Traditional Knowledge and Use Study. Submitted to the Tłı̨chǫ Government on September 15, 2012.

Husky Oil Operations Ltd. 2005. Mikisew Cree First Nation Traditional Land Use Impact Assessment: Husky Sunrise Thermal Project. Submitted to the Mikisew Cree First Nation in June 2005.

Indian and Northern Affairs Canada, and Milton Freeman Research Limited. 1976. Inuit Land Use and Occupancy Project: A Report. Ottawa: Minister of Supply and Services Canada, .

Kwikwetlem First Nation. 2007. Kwitwetlem First Nation Traditional Use Study Report, Phase 1: Relating to Portion of Kwikwetlem Traditional Territory Affected By the Ministry of Transportation’s Gateway Program. Coquitlam, BC.

Lifeways of Canada, Ltd. 2012. Aboriginal Consultation, Traditional Ecological Knowledge and Land Use. Prepared for: Coal Valley Resources Inc.

Métis Nation of Ontario. 2010. Southern Ontario Métis Nation Traditional Plant Use Study. Métis Nation of Ontario and AECOM.

Nalcor Energy. 2012. Labrador Island Transmission Link. Environmental Impact Statement: Chapter 10 (5B) pp 10-209.

———. 2012. Labrador Island Transmission Link. Environmental Impact Statement. Chapter 15: Existing Socioeconomic Environment.

Norwegian, Herb & Petr Cizek. 2004. Using Land Use and Occupancy Mapping and GIS to Establish A Protected Area Network in the Deh Cho Territory. Northwest Territories: Deh Cho First Nations.

Nove Environment. 2004. Centrale de l'Eastmain-1-A et dérivation Rupert: Utilisation du territoire par les Cris - Activités de chasse, de pêche et de trappage (Eastmain-1-A Powerhouse and Rupert Diversion: Cree land use, hunting, fishing, and trapping activities). Montreal: Hydro-Quebec.

Rescan 2009. Northwest Transmission Line Project: Skii km Lax Ha Traditional Use and Knowledge Report. Prepared for British Columbia Transmission Corporation by Rescan Environmental Services Ltd.: Vancouver, British Columbia.

———. 2012. KSM Project: Tahltan Nation Traditional Knowledge and Use Desk-based Research Report. Prepared for Seabridge Gold Inc. by Rescan Environmental Services Ltd.: Vancouver, British Columbia.

Rescan. 2012.KSM Project: Skii km Lax Ha Traditional Knowledge and Use Report. Prepared for Seabridge Gold Inc. by Rescan Environmental Services Ltd.: Vancouver, British Columbia.

SLR Consulting and Dillon Consulting. 2011. Muskoday First Nation: Traditional KNowledge Report. SLR Project No.: 208.04556.00001

Stantec. 2013. Sisson Project: Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) Report. Submitted to Northcliffe Resources, Inc.

Stephen R. Braund & Associates. 2010. Subsistence Mapping of Nuiqsut, Kaktovik and Barrow. MMS OCS Study Number 2009-003. Anchorage, AK.

Traditionals Consulting Services Inc. 2007. Vancouver Island Transmission Reinforcement Traditional Use Study (VITR TUS). Submitted to Hul’qumi’num Treaty Group.

Usher, Peter J. 1990. Recent and Current Land Use and Occupancy in the Northwest Territories By Chipewyan Denesuline Bands (Saskatchewan Athabasca Region). Submitted to the office of the Prince Albert Tribal Council.

Wildlife, Lands and Environment Committee and Lutsel K’e Dene First Nation. 2002. Denesuline Fishing Knowledge of the East Arm of Tu Nedhé (Great Slave Lake): Final Report on Thirty Interviews.  Submitted to: Department of Fisheries and Oceans Hay River, NT.

Willow Springs Strategic Solutions Inc. 2014. Métis Traditional Land Use and Occupancy Study: Teck Resources Limited – Frontier Oil Sands Mine Project. Submitted to the Fort McMurray Métis Local 1935.

Winbourne, J. and Haida Oceans Technical Team, Haida Fisheries Program. 2011. Haida Marine Traditional Knowledge Study Volume 1: Methods and Results Summary.

———. 2011. Haida Marine Traditional Knowledge Study Volume 2: Seascape Unit Summary.

———. 2011. Haida Marine Traditional Knowledge Study Volume 3: Focal Species Summary.

 

Other Sources of Interest

Methodological Guides:

Mackenzie Valley Review Board. 2005.Guidelines for Incorporating Traditional Knowledge in Environmental Impact Assessment. Mackenzie Valley Environmental Impact Review Board, Yellowknife, NT.

Minister of Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development. 2003.Best Practices Handbook For Traditional Use Studies, Eds. Jaime Honda-Mcneil, Denise Parsons. Alberta: Government of Alberta, Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development.

 

Reports Primarily for Scholarly Audiences (Books and Journals):

Agius, Parry, Tom Jenkin, Sandy Jarvis, Richie Howitt, and Rhain Williams. 2007. (Re)Asserting Indigenous Rights and Jurisdictions Within A Politics of Place: Transformative Nature of Native Title Negotiations in South Australia. Geographical Research 45 (2): 194-202.

Arcas Consulting Archaeologists LTD. Pinecone Lake - Burke Mountain Pas Study Area: Katzie Oral History. Prepared For B.C. Parks South Coast Region. Coquitlam, BC.

Blaut, JM. 1979. “Some Principles of Ethnogeography” in S. Gale and G. Olson (Eds.) Philosophy in Geography. 1-8. Dordrecht: D. Reidel

Bouchard, Randy and Dorothy Kennedy. 1984. Indian Land Use and Occupancy in Franklin D. Roosevelt Lake Area of Washington State. Prepared For the Colville Confederated Tribes and the United States Bureau of Reclamation. Victoria: British Columbia Indian Language Project.

Bouvier, Anne-Laure, Veronique Landry, and Jean-Philippe Waaub. 2009. Aboriginal Land Planning in Canada: the Role of Strategic Environmental Assessment in Adaptive Co-Management. Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency.

Brice-Bennett, Carol. 1977. Our Footprints Are Everywhere: Inuit Land Use and Occupancy in Labrador. Nain: Labrador Inuit Association.

Brickell, Katherine and Ayona Datta (Eds) 2011. Translocal Geographies: Spaces, Places, Connections. Burlington: Ashgate.

Brown, Deidre, and George Nicholas. 2012. Protecting Indigenous Cultural Property in the Age of Digital Democracy: Institutional and Communal Responses to Canadian First Nations and Maori Heritage Concerns. Journal of Material Culture 17 (3): 307-24.

Burri, Mira. 2010. Digital Technologies and Traditional Cultural Expressions: A Positive Look at A Difficult Relationship. International Journal of Cultural Property 17 (1): 33-63.

Cameron, Emilie. 2012. Securing Indigenous Geopolitics: A Critique of the Vulnerability and Adaptation Approach to the Human Dimensions of Climate Change in the Canadian Arctic. Global Environment Change 22 (1): 103-14.

Carrier Sekani Tribal Council. 2006. Aboriginal Interests and Use Study On the Enbridge Gateway Pipeline. Submitted to Gateway Pipeline Inc.

Caswell, Michelle. 2013. On Archival Pluralism: What Religious Pluralism (and Its Critics) Can Teach Us About Archives. Archival Science 13 (4): 273-92.

Christen, Kimberly. 2008. Working Together: Archival Challenges and Digital Solutions in Aboriginal Australia. Society for American Archaeology. 8 (2): 21-25.

———. 2009. Access and Accountability: the Ecology of Information Sharing in the Digital Age. Anthropology News 50 (4): 4-.

Christen, Kimberly. 2012. Does Information Really Want to Be Free? Indigenous Knowledge Systems and the Question of Openness. International Journal of Communication (Online): 2870.

Christie, G. 2011. Indigeneity and Sovereignty in Canada’s Far North: the Arctic and Inuit Sovereignty. South Atlantic Quarterly 110(2), 329-346.

Christie, M. 2004. Computer Databases and Aboriginal Knowledge. Learning Communities. International Journal of Learning in Social Contexts. 1, 4-12.

Cohen, Anthony P., and Myilibrary. 2000. Signifying Identities. London ; New York: Routledge.

Cohen, Matt. 2011. the Codex and the Knife. Textual Cultures 6 (2): 109-18.

Coleman, D. J., and S. Li. 1999. Developing A Groupware-Based Prototype to Support Geomatics Production Management. Computers, Environment and Urban Systems 23 (4): 315-31.

Collignon, Beatrice and Ludger W Muller-Wille. 2006. Knowing Places: the Innuinait Landscapes and the Environment. Edmonton: CCI Press.

Conkey, Meg, and Lynn Morgan. 2013. Implementing Feminist Practice: A Conversation With Meg Conkey. American Anthropologist 115 (4): 546-54.

Darnell, Regna. 2000. Part III: Continued Mapping of North America’ in and Along Came Boas: Continuity and Revolution in Americanist Anthropology. in the Studies in the History of Language Sciences Series of the Amsterdam Studies in the theory and History of Linguistic Science., 177-242. Philadelphia: John Benjamins Publishing Co.

De Laguna, Frederica. 1972. Under Mount Saint Elias: the History and Culture of the Yakutat Tlingit. Washington: Smithsonian Institution Press.

Dickerson, Mark O., Monique M. Ross, Sherry Horvath, and Laura Mackinnon. 2002. the Impact of the Traditional Land Use and Occupancy Study On the Dene Tha' First Nation. The Canadian Journal of Native Studies 22 (2): 361.

Dove, Michael R. 2006. Indigenous People and Environmental Politics. Annual Review of Anthropology 35 : 191-208.

Elias, Peter D. 1989. Rights and Research: the Role of the Social Sciences in the Legal and Political Resolution of Land Claims and Questions of Aboriginal Rights. Canadian Native Law Reporter(1): 1-43.

———. 1993. Anthropology and Aboriginal Claims Research. in Anthropology, Public Policy and Native Peoples in Canada., Eds. Noel Dyck, James B. Waldram, 233. Montreal & Kingston: Mcgill-Queen's University Press.

Edwards, E. (Ed.). 2003. Talking Visual Histories: Introduction. Peers, L., Brown, A.K. (Eds). Museum and Source Communities. A Routledge Reader, Routledge, London and New York, Pp. 83-99.

Ellen, R.F., Peter Parkes and Alan Bicker (Eds). 2000. Indigenous Environmental Knowledge and Its Transformations: Critical Anthropological Perspectives. Amsterdam: Harwood Academic.

Feld, Steven, and Keith Basso. 1996. Senses of Place. Santa Fe: School of American Research.

Gelean, Shannon. 1997. Traditional Use Study Program of British Columbia. Seattle, Washington.

Hawkins, Harriet 2013. For Creative Geographies: Geography, Visual Arts and the Making of Worlds. London and New York: Routledge.

Hennessy, Kate. 2012. Cultural Heritage On the Web: Applied Digital Visual Anthropology and Local Cultural Property Rights Discourse.(Intangible Property at the Periphery: Expanding Enclosure in the 21st Century). International Journal of Cultural Property 19 (3): 345-69.

Horvath, Sherry, Mark O. Dickerson, Laura Mckinnon Mckinnon, and Monique M. Ross. 2002. The Impact of the Traditional Land Use and Occupancy Study On the Dene Tha' First Nation. Canadian Journal of Native Studies 22 (2): 361-98.

Holcombe, Sarah. 2010. the Arrogance of Ethnography: Managing Anthropological Research Knowledge. Australian Aboriginal Studies(2): 22-32.

Howard, Albert, and Frances Widdowson. 1996. Traditional Knowledge Threatens Environmental Assessment. Vol. 17. Montreal: Institute For Research On Public Policy.

Howitt, Richard. 2001. Rethinking Resource Management Justice, Sustainability and Indigenous Peoples. London: Routledge.

Ingold, Tim. 1987. Territoriality and Tenure: the Appropriation of Space in Hunting and Gathering Societies. in the Appropriation of Nature: Essays On Human Ecology and Social Relations., 130-164. Iowa City: University of Iowa Press.

Jones, Craig. 2002. Aboriginal Boundaries: the Mediation and Settlement of Aboriginal Boundary Disputes in A Native Title Context. National Native Title Tribunal Occasional Papers Series 2: 16.

Kelty, Christopher M., Michael M. J. Fischer, Alex "Rex" Goulab, Jason Baird Jackson, Kimberly Brown Christen Michael F., and Tom Boellstroff. 2008. Anthropology of/in Circulation: the Future of Open Access and Scholarly Societies. Vol. 23. Malden, USA: Blackwell Publishing Inc.

Leonard JS Tsuji, Daniel D Mccarthy, Graham S Whitelaw, and Jessica Mceachren. 2011. Getting Back to Basics: the Victor Diamond Mine Environmental Assessment Scoping Process and the Issue of Family-Based Traditional Lands Versus Registered Traplines. Impact Assessment and Project Appraisal 29 (1): 37-47.

Lester, Geoffrey. 1979. Aboriginal Land Rights: the Significance of Inuit Place-Naming. Études/Inuit/Studies 3 (1): 53-74.

Mackinnon, L., C. Apentiik, and M. P. Robinson. 2001. Revisiting Traditional Land Use and Occupancy Studies: Relevance and Implications For Resource Management in Alberta. Forestry Chronicle 77 (3): 479-89.

Maina, Charles Kamau. 2012. Traditional Knowledge Management and Preservation: Intersections With Library and Information Science. International Information and Library Review 44 (1): 13-27.

Mckemmish, Sue, Shannon Faulkhead, and Lynette Russell. 2011. Distrust in the Archive: Reconciling Records. Archival Science 11 (3): 211-39.

Meadows, William. 2008. Kiowa Ethnography. Austin: University of Texas Press.

Mensah, Joseph. 1995. Geography, Aboriginal Land Claims and Self-Government in Canada. International Journal of Canadian Studies 1 (2): 261-76.

Menzies, Charles. 2008. Report On Gitxaala Use and Occupancy of the Area Now Known As Prince Rupert Harbour With Specific Reference to the Site of the Prince Rupert Container Port Development. University of British Columbia. Publication Unknown.

Michalenko, Greg, Brent Hall, Muskrat Dam First Nation, Tobias, Terry, and Stephen Kilburn. 1993. Coming of Age Between the Giants and the Trees: A Young Indian Village in Northern Canada Struggles to Maintain Land and Resources. in Indigenous Land Rights in Commonwealth Countries: Dispossession, Negotiation and Community Action., 99-109. Christchurch: University of Canterbury.

Morphy, Howard, and Frances Morphy. 2006. Tasting the Waters: Discriminating Identities in the Waters of Blue Mud Bay. Journal of Material Culture 11 (1-2): 67-85.

Murray, Carol, Marc Nelitz, and Leonardo Frid. 2006. Review of the Results of the Hul'qumi'num Treaty Group VITR Traditional Use Study Against the Findings of Our Technical Review of the British Columbia Transmission Corporation's Application For An Environmental Assessment Certificate For the Vancouver Island Transmission Reinforcement Project. Vancouver: ESSA Technologies Ltd.

Natcher, David C., Ryan Christopher Walker , and Theodore S. Jojola. 2013. Reclaiming Indigenous Planning. Montreal: Mcgill-Queen's University Press.

Overstall, Richard. 2005. Encountering the Spirit in the Land: “Property” in A Kinship-Based Legal Order. in Despotic Dominion: Property Rights in British Settler Societies., Eds. J. Mclaren, Buck, A., Wright, N., 22-48. Vancouver: UBC Press.

Poirier, S. 2000. Contemporanéités Autochtones, Territoires Et (Post) Colonialisme. Réflexions Sur Des Exemples Canadiens Et Australiens. Anthropologie Et Sociétés 24 (1): 137-53.

———. 2001. Territory, Identity and Modernity Among the Atikamekw (Haut St-Maurice, Quebec). in Aboriginal Autonomy and Development in Northern Quebec and Labrador., Ed. Colin Scott, 98-116. Vancouver: UBC Press.

———. 2004. Ontology, Ancestral Order and Agencies Among the Kukatja of the Australian Western Desert. in Figured Worlds: Ontological Obstacles in Intercultural Relations., Eds. John Clammer, Sylvie Poirier and Eric Schwimmer, 58-82. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.

Preston, Susan. 2011. Lifeworlds and Property: Epistemological Challenges to Cree Concepts of Land in the 20th Century. in Property, Territory, Globalization: Struggles Over Autonomy., Ed. W. Coleman, 56-78. Vancouver: UBC Press.

Ruedas, Javier. 2012. A Digital Repository For Indigenous Amazonian Cultural Materials. the University of Texas at Austin.

Scott, Colin.1986. Hunting Territories, Hunting Bosses and Communal Production Among Coastal James Bay Cree. Anthropologica 28 (1-2): 163-73.

———. 1988. Property, Practice and Aboriginal Rights Among Quebec Cree Hunters. in Hunters and Gatherers 2: Property, Power and Ideology., Eds. Tim Ingold, David Riches and James Woodburn, 35-51. Oxford: Berg.

Sui, Daniel, Sarah Elwood, Michael Goodchild, and Springerlink (Online Service). 2013. Crowdsourcing Geographic Knowledge: Volunteered Geographic Information (VGI) in Theory and Practice. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands.

Usher, Peter J. 2000. Traditional Ecological Knowledge in Environmental Assessment and Management. Arctic 53 (2): 183-93.

Wainwright, Joel, and Joe Bryan. 2008. Decolonizing Development : Colonial Power and the Maya. Antipode Book Series. Malden, MA: Blackwell Pub.

Waterman, Thomas T. 1922. the Geographical Names Used By the Indians of the Pacific Coast. the Geographical Review 12 (2): 175-94.

Weinstein, Martin. 1977. What the Land Provides: An Examination of the Fort George Subsistence Economy and Possible Consequences On It of the James Bay Hydroelectric Project.  . Montreal: Grand Council of the Crees.

Westman, Clinton. 2013. Social Impact Assessment and the Anthropology of the Future in Canada’s Tar Sands. Human Organization 72 (2): 111-20.

Wiber, Melanie G., and Peter Lovell. 2004. Property, Kinship and Cultural Capital: the Ethics of Modelling Kinship in Sustainable Resource Management. Anthropologica 46 (1): 85-98.

Wilson, Raymond (Rocky). 2007. to Honour Our Ancestors We Become Visible Again. in Be of Good Mind: Essays On the Coast Salish., Ed. Bruce Granville Miller, 131-137. Vancouver, BC: UBC Press.

Wonders, William C.  Native Place Names and Land Occupancy in the Northern Mackenzie Valley Area. Canoma 10 (1): 24-9.

Wyatt, Stephen Et. Al. 2010. A State of Knowledge Report: Can Aboriginal Land Use and Occupancy Studies Be Applied Effectively in Forest Management? Sustainable Forest Management Network, Edmonton, Alberta.


Reports Produced Primarily for Professional and Community Government Audiences:

William C. Wonders, "Overlapping Land Use and Occupancy of Dene, Métis, Inuvialuit and Inuit in the Northwest Territories" (Government Report, Government of Canada, Ottawa, 1983/4).

Wonders, William C.1983. Overlapping Land Use and Occupancy of Dene, Metis, Inuvialuit and Inuit in the Northwest Territories. Ottawa: Indian and Northern Affairs Canada.