This page is dedicated to sharing open-access literature about wildlife co-management. The references and links are included in a public Zotero group. Click the Zotero logo to access our database directly at Zotero. You may also search the database below from this website. Our goal is to make these resources accessible to the people of the North who have less access to research that has traditionally been behind paywalls.
The flux of trust: Caribou co-management in Northern Canada
Co-management of natural resources: A comparison of two caribou management systems
“It’s Hard Enough to Control Yourself; It’s Ridiculous to Think You Can Control Animals.” Competing Views on “The Bush” in Contemporary Yukon
Using social-ecological systems theory to evaluate large-scale comanagement efforts: a case study of the Inuvialuit Settlement Region
Contrasts in Use and Perceptions of Biological Data for Caribou Management
Knowledge co-production and co-management of Arctic wildlife
How Traditional Knowledge Comes to Matter in Atlantic Salmon Governance in Norway and Finland
Undermining subsistence: Barren-ground caribou in a “tragedy of open access”
Caribou Hunters and Researchers at the Co-management Interface: Emergent Dilemmas and the Dynamics of Legitimacy in Power Sharing
Assessing Stakeholder Participation in Sub-Arctic Co-Management: Administrative Rulemaking and Private Agreements
Wildlife Management in Nunavik: Structures, Operations, and Perceptions Following the James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement
Traditional Knowledge of the Ecology of Beluga Whales (<i>Delphinapterus leucas</i>) in the Eastern Chukchi and Northern Bering Seas, Alaska