The role of trust in sustainable management of land, fish, and wildlife populations in the Arctic
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/14934Date
2018-09-01Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Schmidt, Jennifer Irene; Clark, Douglas; Lokken, Nils; Lankshear, Jessica; Hausner, Vera HeleneAbstract
Sustainable resource management depends on support from the public and local
stakeholders. Fish, wildlife, and land management in remote areas face the challenge of working
across vast areas, often with limited resources, to monitor land use or the status of the fish-and-wildlife
populations. Resource managers depend on local residents, often Indigenous, to gain information
about environmental changes and harvest trends. Developing mutual trust is thus important for
the transfer of knowledge and sustainable use of land resources. We interviewed residents of
eight communities in Arctic Alaska and Canada and analyzed their trust in resource governance
organizations using mixed-methods. Trust was much greater among Alaska (72%) and Nunavut
(62%) residents than Churchill (23%). Trust was highest for organizations that dealt with fish and
wildlife issues, had no legal enforcement rights, and were associated with Indigenous peoples. Local
organizations were trusted more than non-local in Alaska and Nunavut, but the opposite was true
in Churchill. Association tests and modeling indicated that characteristics of organizations were
significantly related to trust, whereas education was among the few individual-level characteristics
that mattered for trust. Familiarity, communication, and education are crucial to improve, maintain,
or foster trust for more effective management of natural resources in such remote communities.
Description
Source at https://doi.org/10.3390/su10093124.