ANNOUNCING
An International Workshop on
The Human Role
in Reindeer/Caribou Systems:
Coping with Threats to Environmental Security in Northern Landscapes
10-14 February 1999
The Arctic Centre
Rovaniemi, Finland
The Need for the Workshop
Arctic residents face dramatic changes to the biological
resources vitally important to their physical and cultural survival.
The workshop will explore the impact of human activity on arctic caribou
and reindeer systems and the role of those systems in the resilience
of arctic communities. Caribou and reindeer are the most important land-based
species for people living in the Arctic (Figure 1 shows the distribution
of the species.) The International Arctic Science Committee (IASC),
representing national science organizations in 17 countries, has adopted
this project as a priority on the IASC science agenda. The workshop
will be the world's first gathering of natural and social scientists
and indigenous peoples to address changes in arctic caribou and reindeer
systems. The goal is to develop and widely disseminate a comprehensive
plan for scientific research that promotes the physical and cultural
well-being of Arctic residents and reduces conflicts over resource use
and the timing and scope of extractive development.
Caribou and reindeer (scientifically known as Rangifer tarandus play a crucial role in human habitation of
the Arctic by providing food, shelter, and transportation. The animals
are central to the cultures of many indigenous peoples, including the
Chukchi, Cree, Dene, Even, Evenki, Gwi'chin, Innu, Inuit, Metis, Nenets,
Saami, Sakha (Yakut), Yukagir, and Yupiit. Changes in caribou and reindeer
systems that may adversely impact these and other arctic residents include
reductions in grazing land and resources as a result of large-scale
development by mining and hydrocarbon industries, habitat alteration
due to global warming and pollution, and shifts from subsistence hunting
and herding to commercial herding. Fundamental changes in economic,
political, and legal structures also affect indigenous peoples and their
use of natural resources. For example, the decline of state farms and
the rise of privatization and a market economy in the former Soviet
Union are changing arctic residents' roles. Recent land claims agreements,
court decisions, and the establishment of co-management regimes across
the North American Arctic have resulted in newly acknowledged rights
and roles for indigenous peoples in managing wild and semi-domesticated
herds. The effects of these changes on caribou and reindeer systems
and their relationship to indigenous peoples are potentially extreme,
but have received little scientific study. Conflicts between a traditional
reindeer economy and an expanding globally oriented industrial system
are particularly pronounced in the Russian North.
Figure 1. Reindeer/caribou distribution
This workshop will draw on a pool of knowledge from caribou
and reindeer users as well as past and ongoing studies by the science
community. Research sponsored by the National Science Foundation, Smithsonian
Institution, and U.S. Man and Biosphere Program and international meetings
such as the International Arctic Ungulate Conferences, World Reindeer
Congresses, and North American Caribou Workshops provide a basis for
sustainable land and resource management. Scientists are investigating
ecosystem relationships of caribou and reindeer and the human connections
to arctic grazing systems, including their cultural, social, and economic
importance. They are expanding knowledge of the effectiveness of different
management systems and the impact of political and legal issues on land
use. These initiatives, while valuable, are specific to particular areas
and communities. Thus, there is a critical need for a broad initiative
that is comprehensive in scope, covers the entire arctic region, and
represents all relevant scientific and resident communities.
A European Community Concerted Action group entitled the
Arctic and Alpine Terrestrial Ecosystems Research Initiative (ARTERI)
held a workshop in Inari, Finland, in October 1997 on human environment
interaction in the north, with particular emphasis on the relationship
between modern and traditional knowledge. ARTERI plans to contribute
its funds the workshop in order to further its own initiatives on human/environment
interactions at the landscape level, using reindeer management as a
case study. ARTERI aims to arrive at common research agendas in northern
Fennoscandia and Russia on the development of reindeer management policies
through dynamic interaction between the research community and stakeholder
groups. A focal point of their effort will be the identification of
compatibilities between the modern scientific knowledge base and the
traditional/indigenous knowledge base.
Coordination among research efforts is needed to assure
complementarity of studies, comparability of findings, and a common
understanding of the complexities and variations that characterize arctic
grazing systems. The proposed conference will address research gaps
identified by the working group on the dynamics of arctic populations
at the International Conference on Arctic Research Planning (ICARP).
These gaps include the need to understand ecosystem processes and relationships
that characterize and influence grazing systems' productivity and sustainability.
Such an understanding will require collaboration among resident user
groups, biological and social scientists (e.g. biologists, ecologists,
anthropologists, geographers, sociologists, economists, political scientists)
and systems modelers, with physical scientists' input on climatology.
The conference organizing committee includes academic and research scientists
and indigenous leaders from six arctic nations: Canada, Finland, Norway,
Russia, Sweden, and the United States.
The three-day workshop will address key science questions
identified in the ICARP final report, including how humans respond to
ecosystem changes in the quality or quantity of resources, and how the
environment responds when humans alter the way they interact with the
environment. Participants will consider to what extent we can predict
the impact of external influences on northern resources and people,
and how changing institutions, rights, rules, and regulations regarding
arctic resources affect the health of native populations and ecosystems.
The format will familiarize participants with current major research
initiatives and the concerns and views of arctic residents. It will
result in recommendations for institutional responses to management
challenges including ways to protect caribou and reindeer habitats,
ways to reduce conflicts between renewable resource based livelihoods
and non-renewable resource extraction, and ways to minimize the environmental,
social, and cultural impacts of industrial development.
Products
Three main products will result from the workshop:
(1) a comprehensive science plan which identifies the
gaps in prior research and existing cooperative arrangements and proposes
a strategy to fill the gaps;
(2) a book or a special issue of Polar Geography (or other
peer-reviewed journal) with papers from the plenary speakers and contributing
authors, and
(3) a network that combines scientists, the user community,
and those engaged in managing and protecting reindeer/caribou systems.
Date and locale
The workshop is scheduled for February 10-14, 1999 in
Rovaniemi, Finland. Situated on the Arctic Circle, Rovaniemi lies well
within the reindeer herding economic region of northern Finland in which
both Saami and non-indigenous herders are active. The Arctic Centre
at the University of Lapland, a national institution devoted to multidisciplinary
research on human-environment interactions within the circumpolar North,
will host the workshop. This location was chosen to maximize participation
from Russia and Fennoscandia, keep costs low for participants from Western
countries, and accommodate optional excursions to the Finnish Reindeer
Research Station in Kaamanen and the Saami museum in Inari.
Key Science Questions
The workshop will address the following key science questions
identified by the working group on the dynamics of arctic populations
and ecosystems at the International Conference on Arctic Research Planning
(ICARP).
1) When there is a change within ecosystems in the quality
or quantity of resources available to human users, how do humans respond?
2) When humans alter the way they interact with the environment,
how does the environment respond? Can we predict the impact of this
feedback on the various components of the ecosystem?
3) Can we predict the impact of external influences (ranging
from pressures and constraints applied by outside authorities to long-range
transport of pollutants into the reindeer and caribou/human food chain)
on northern resources and people?
4) How do changing institutions, rights, rules, and regulations
regarding access to, management of, and ownership of land, water, and
other natural resources affect the health of populations and ecosystems?
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