@article{Dyack:139725,
      recid = {139725},
      author = {Dyack, Brenda and Greiner, Romy},
      title = {Natural Resource Management and Indigenous Well Being},
      address = {2006},
      number = {417-2016-26338},
      pages = {29},
      year = {2006},
      abstract = {This paper considers the usefulness of a range of  analytical approaches to describing
the impact of natural  resource management on Indigenous people. Six approaches  are
reviewed here with examples from the literature. These  include: a well-being index
approach used recently by  Greiner with the Australian Nywaigi people; a  replacement
value approach to valuing wild resource  harvests for the Wallis Lake area of north
eastern New  South Wales; a bio-economic approach to  Indigenous/Non-Indigenous
fisheries management of the  Ontario Great Lakes used by Dyack; a stated  preference
approach used in New Zealand; a Choice  Experiment in northern Saskatchewan and
Alberta; and, a  Goal Programming/Multi-Criteria Analysis with the Wik  People from the
York Peninsula in north eastern Australia.  The purpose of this review is to provide a
discussion  document for a new project. This project is developing as a  collaboration in
the Murray River Basin in south east  Australia with the Ngarrindjeri People. Examples
highlight  the challenges for measuring values and well being  especially when the context
implies potential tradeoffs  between Indigenous interests for health of country and  nonindigenous
interests. References in this regard are made  to sport fishery expansion in
the Great Lakes and  irrigation diversions for the Murray},
      url = {http://ageconsearch.umn.edu/record/139725},
      doi = {https://doi.org/10.22004/ag.econ.139725},
}