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HERO ID
7583062
Reference Type
Journal Article
Title
Being on Land and Sea in Troubled Times: Climate Change and Food Sovereignty in Nunavut
Author(s)
Panikkar, B; Lemmond, B
Year
2020
Volume
9
Issue
12
Page Numbers
508-508
Language
English
Web of Science Id
CCC:000601940700001
URL
http:///www.mdpi.com
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Abstract
Climate change driven food insecurity has emerged as a topic of special concern in the Canadian Arctic. Inuit communities in this region rely heavily on subsistence; however, access to traditional food sources may have been compromised due to climate change. Drawing from a total of 25 interviews among Inuit elders and experienced hunters from Cambridge Bay and Kugluktuk in Nunavut, Canada, this research examines how climate change is impacting food sovereignty and health. Our results show that reports of food insecurity were more pronounced in Kugluktuk than Cambridge Bay. Participants in Kugluktuk consistently noted declining availability of preferred fish and game species (e.g., caribou, Arctic char), a decline in participation of sharing networks, and overall increased difficulty accessing traditional foods. Respondents in both communities presented a consistent picture of climate change compounding existing socio-economic (e.g., poverty, disconnect between elders and youth) and health stressors affecting multiple aspects of food sovereignty. This article presents a situated understanding of how climate change as well as other sociocultural factors are eroding food sovereignty at the community-scale in the Arctic. We argue that a communal focus is required to address resilience and adaptation at the local level through programs that protect the local cultural knowledge, traditional ways of life, and indigenous sovereignty to reduce the severities of food insecurity in the Arctic stemming from climate change.
Keywords
Geography; Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Inuit food sovereignty, food security, Inuit health, climate change,; Inuit subsistence practices; change impacts, inuit, ice, insecurity, security, subsistence,; adaptation, health, diet, vulnerability
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