“The Names Spread in All Directions”: Hereditary Titles in Tsimshian Social and Political Life
By Christopher Roth
BC Studies no. 130 Summer 2001 pp. 69-92
Baby Stumpy and the War in the Woods: Competing Frames of British Columbia Forests
By Lorna Stefanick
BC Studies no. 130 Summer 2001 pp. 41-68
By W. Scott Prudham, Maureen G. Reed
BC Studies no. 130 Summer 2001 pp. 5-40
Seeing the Forest and the Trees: Environmental History and the Forests of the North American West
By Bruce Shelvey
BC Studies no. 130 Summer 2001 pp. 93-104
By Robert Galois
BC Studies no. 130 Summer 2001 pp. 127-9
Tongass: Pulp Politics and the Fight for the Alaska Rainforest
By Kathie Durbin
BC Studies no. 130 Summer 2001 pp. 93-104
Handmade Forests: The Treeplanter’s Experience
By Briony Penn
BC Studies no. 130 Summer 2001 pp. 111-2
Boys in the Pits: Child Labour in Coal Mines
By John Belshaw
BC Studies no. 130 Summer 2001 pp. 129-31
Reclaiming Indigenous Voice and Vision
By Jeanette Villeneuve
BC Studies no. 130 Summer 2001 pp. 125- 6
Sun Dogs and Eagle Down: The Indian Paintings of Bill Holm
By Aaron Glass
BC Studies no. 130 Summer 2001 pp. 122-4
Potlatch at Gitsegukla: William Beynon’s 1945 Field Notebooks
By Marjorie M. Halpin
BC Studies no. 130 Summer 2001 pp. 118-21
Glyphs and Gallows: The Rock Art of Clo-oose and the Wreck of the John Bright
By Chris Arnett
BC Studies no. 130 Summer 2001 pp. 117-8
The Ecological Indian: Myth and History
By Shepard Krech III
BC Studies no. 130 Summer 2001 pp. 113-4
Flexible Crossroads: The Restructuring of British Columbia’s Forest Economy
By Fred Gale
BC Studies no. 130 Summer 2001 pp. 105- 9
At a Crossroads: Archaeology and First Peoples in Canada
By Quentin Mackie
BC Studies no. 130 Summer 2001 pp. 114-6
Fred Gale is a lecturer at the School of Government, University of Tasmania, Australia. He is author of The Tropical Timber Trade Regime (Macmillan/Palgrave 1998) and editor (with Michael M’Gonigle) of Nature Production Power (Edward Elgar 2000).
Scott Prudham is assistant professor in the Department of Geography, the Program in Planning, and the Institute for Environmental Studies at the University of Toronto. His publications focus on environmental politics and regulation.
Maureen Reed is an associate professor in the Geography Department at the University of Saskatchewan. She has published in the area of environmental policy analysis, focused on how changes in environmental and land-use policies affect rural and resource-based communities in Canada.
Christopher Roth earned his PhD in Anthropology from the University of Chicago. He has been working with the Tsimshian since 1995, investigating language, kinship, and ceremonial and political institutions. He has taught anthropology at Lewis and Clark College, Barat College, and the University of Chicago
Lorna Stefanick is the Associate Director of the Government Studies unit in the Faculty of Extension, University of Alberta. She has published articles on environmental policy, activism, and consultation processes.
Bruce Shelvey is Chair of History, Political Science and Geography at Trinity Western University.
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