Cultural Resource Relations: An Exploration of Tribal Interests Within the Sweet Home Ranger District

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Date

2018-08-25

Authors

Stone, Jill

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Abstract

Federal-tribal collaborations in resource management are becoming more common, but successes are difficult to duplicate and recommendations for future partnerships are often vague, nontransferable, or dependent on a specific tribe, federal agency, or context. Since no two partnerships are alike, I ask how and why two projects within the same ranger district, with relations to the same tribes and harboring similar goals, have evolved and been implemented in different ways. Both Camas Prairie and Cougar Rock, two resource management projects within the Sweet Home Ranger District of the Willamette National Forest in Oregon, aim to improve access to and abundance of American Indian first foods. As a means to compare the two sites, this project uses a literature review to generate seven ‘guiding principles of a successful federal-tribal collaboration.’ The principles are then employed through a case study analysis, using in depth interviews and document analysis, in order to 1) Better understand the differences between two projects involving similar tribal interests 2) Explain how a specific landscape context adds to current understanding of federal-tribal relations and 3) Make recommendations to land managers on ways to better identify promising collaborations.

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Examining committee chair: Chris Enright

Keywords

Tribal interests, Cultural resources, Oregon American Indians

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