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Lauren E. Eckert

Researcher at University of Victoria

Publications -  7
Citations -  349

Lauren E. Eckert is an academic researcher from University of Victoria. The author has contributed to research in topics: Traditional knowledge & Indigenous. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 7 publications receiving 141 citations.

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“Two‐Eyed Seeing”: An Indigenous framework to transform fisheries research and management

TL;DR: It is with t'ooyaks (Nisga'a for ‘thanks’) to senior author and Mi'kmaw Elder Dr. Albert Marshall that we (the author team) have come to learn and embrace the concept of Etuaptmumk (Mi’kmaw for 'TwoEyed Seeing') and it is through his guidance that we have envisioned a new path for fisheries research and management as discussed by the authors.
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Diving back in time: Extending historical baselines for yelloweye rockfish with Indigenous knowledge

TL;DR: In this article, the authors interviewed Indigenous fishers of British Columbia, Canada, and asked about observed changes to the body sizes (length) and abundance of this species over the last ~60 years and the factors driving these changes.
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Indigenous knowledge as data for modern fishery management: a case study of Dungeness crab in Pacific Canada.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that fisheries management is often data-limited, and conducted at spatial scales that are too large to address the needs of Indigenous peoples, whose cultures depend upon the local availab...
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Indigenous knowledge and federal environmental assessments in Canada: applying past lessons to the 2019 impact assessment act

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors have used Indigenous knowledge (IK) to inform decisions about environmental managements, and have shown that IK can help policy-makers to make well-informed, socially just means to make environmental decisions.
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Large carnivore hunting and the social license to hunt.

TL;DR: A modified model, referred to as Social License to Hunt (SLH), is offered, which provides a conceptual foundation for predicting the likelihood of transient versus enduring changes to wildlife conservation policy and practice for a wide variety of taxa and contexts.