ABOUT THIS BOOK
PUBLISHER: University of British Columbia Press
FORMAT: Paperback
ISBN: 9780774880015
RRP: £22.99
PAGES: 348
PUBLICATION DATE:
September 1, 2018
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Hunting the Northern Character
Tony Penikett
This book will appeal to anyone interested in the North, whether student or scholar, northern or southerner, concerned citizen or policy maker.
Reviews of Hunting the Northern Character
This is an insider's view of Canada's North and the Arctic world generally, informed by decades of experience in all aspects of northern life – social, environmental, and economic. It is astonishingly wide-ranging and comprehensive in its approach to topics, as well as lighthearted and anecdotal. It is difficult to think of anyone who knows more, or as much, about this subject as Penikett, which makes his book indispensable reading for anyone interested in the North. Summing Up: Essential. — W. R. Morrison * CHOICE, April 2018 * There are tantalizing snippets of memoir in this book-Penikett is an excellent writer, and there's one especially lovely description of his presence as honorary pallbearer at his former mother-in-law's funeral and potlatch. But it is largely a comprehensive review of issues such as governance, international relations (a history and critique of the Arctic Council), resource management, climate change, and social issues like poverty, education, and health. Chapters on climate change, the "hungry ghost," and the complex issue of sovereignty are especially good, as Penikett honours traditional knowledge (known colloquially as TK), and the slow integration of traditional knowledge into scientific research and analysis in the Arctic. — Marian Botsford Fraser * Literary Review of Canada *
Tony Penikett
Tony Penikett spent twenty-five years in public life, including two years in the House of Commons as chief of staff to federal NDP leader Ed Broadbent, five terms in the Yukon Legislative Assembly, and two terms as premier of Yukon Territory. His government negotiated settlements of Yukon First Nation land claims and passed pioneering legislation in the areas of education, health, and language. It also organized Yukon 2000, a unique bottom-up economic-planning process. Between 1997 and 2001, he served as deputy minister of negotiations and, later, as deputy minister of labour for the BC government. He is the author of one book, Reconciliation: First Nations Treaty Making in British Columbia, and two films, The Mad Trapper and La Patrouille Perdue.