Table of Contents:
  • Preface
  • Map
  • Part I. Background and policy issues
  • Introduction
  • Chapter 1. Diversity and complexity of tribal fish and wildlife programs
  • Chapter 2. A vision of unity and equity: conversations with the founders of the Native American Fish and Wildlife Society and a look toward the future with Native American youth
  • Chapter 3. Connecting people, science, and culture
  • Chapter 4. Who stands for the river?
  • Part II. Legal issues
  • Chapter 5. The importance of meaningful federal-tribal consultation in land and natural resource management
  • Chapter 6. An introduction to Indian reserved water rights
  • Chapter 7. The promise of intertribal wildlife management
  • Chapter 8. State regulation and enforcing usufructuary treaty rights
  • Chapter 9. Tribal perspectives on the Endangered Species Act
  • Chapter 10. Sinixt hunting: a test of tribal sovereignty
  • Chapter 11. "we always knew," "wetlands"
  • Part III. Resource use, protection, and management
  • Chapter 12. The indigenous sentinels network: community-based monitoring to enhance food security
  • Chapter 13. The Indigenous Guardians Network for Southeast Alaska
  • Chapter 14. Glyph
  • Chapter 15. Case studies of species recovery and management of trumpeter swan and leopard frog on the Flathead Indian Reservation
  • Chapter 16. Co-management in Alaska: a partnership among indigenous, state, and federal entities for the subsistence harvest of migratory birds
  • Chapter 17. Research with tribes: a suggested framework for the co-production of knowledge
  • Chapter 18. Thoughts of an Anishinaabe poet on wildlife biology
  • Chapter 19. Protecting what we've been blessed with: big game and other wildlife programs of the Navajo Nation
  • Chapter 20. Shash
  • Chapter 21. A model for stewardship: the Lower Brule Sioux Tribal Wildlife Department
  • Chapter 22. Reclaiming ancestral lands and relationships
  • Chapter 23. We feel our place in our soul: perspectives from a Fond du Lac elder
  • Chapter 24. Partnerships are the key to conservation
  • Chapter 25. Burmese Python impacts and management on the Miccosukee Reservation, Florida
  • Chapter 26. So many things that humble me
  • Chapter 27. Swamp Boy's Pet and Field Guide (after Aimee Nezhukumatathil)
  • Part IV. Traditional ecological knowledge
  • Chapter 28. Talutsa: weaving a Cherokee future
  • Chapter 29. A traditional strategy to promote ecosystem balance and cultural well-being utilizing the values, philosophies, and knowledge systems of indigenous peoples
  • Chapter 30. The making and unmaking of an indigenous desert oasis and its avifauna: historic declines in Quitobaquito birds as a result in shifts from O'odham stewardship to federal agency management
  • Chapter 31. How traditional ecological knowledge informs the field of conservation biology
  • 32. Yurok traditional ecological knowledge as related to elk management and conservation
  • 33. Kue Meyweehl 'esee kue 'Oohl Megetohlkwopew: elk and the Yurok people take care of each other
  • 34. Power parade in Pablo, Montana
  • Index.