Nitassinan is the ancestral homeland of the Innu people. It covers much of the sub-arctic forest and interior barren lands of the Quebec-Labrador peninsula. The idea of Nitassinan is closely linked to Innu identity. It reflects the physical space that people occupy in the hunting, fishing, and trapping activities that sustain them and, through these activities, Nitassinan comes to embody and reflect the principles of Innu culture to those who are born to and live it. The relationship between people and the land in Nitassinan is often described as a moral one where people continually respect and nurture the land and the animals so that they will continue to provide for people. Nitassinan is thus a combination of physical and cultural landscapes. This notion of multi-dimensional landscapes has come to form the basis of a productive and collaborative research partnership in Labrador.Since 1997, the Innu Nation, Environment Canada, the Gorsebrook Research Institute of Saint Mary's University, and Natural Resources Canada have been exploring new ways to connect Innu knowledge and western science. Our approach began in 1997 with the conceptual category of the Cultural Landscape Unit (CLU) as the basis for generating new knowledge about the biophysical make-up of Labrador. This method started with Innu knowledge and terminology for an element of the landscape that has value and meaning for the Innu and then built a knowledge base of that feature from a number of perspectives. Our hypothesis was that a combined form of ecological knowledge could be developed that recognizes the qualities and limitations of Innu and Scientific knowledge systems and situates both within the specific context of the times they are produced in.
The research partnership focuses on the three following elements:
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