A QUESTION OF IDENTITY: A REVIEW OF RECENT WORK ON BLACKS IN CANADA |
| |
Authors: | Peter Woolfson |
| |
Institution: | Department of Anthropology , University of Vermont , |
| |
Abstract: | In 2010 the US declared the Lake Erie water snake a recovered species, but in Canada the snake is still considered to be an endangered species. After explaining the legal similarities between the Ontario Endangered Species Act and the American Endangered Species Act, this article examines a case study with landowner interviews from one US island and one Canadian island. It is concluded that landowner attitudes toward conservation and private property are very similar. Thus, it is argued that bureaucratic differences, particularly institutional capacity and implementation styles, enabled the US but not Canada to recover the snake. The article concludes with a discussion of the need for better communication between the two countries for the purposes of biodiversity conservation. |
| |
Keywords: | environmental policy Lake Erie endangered species Canada United States |
|
|