Back to Results
First PageMeta Content
Proposed provinces and territories of Canada / Indigenous peoples of North America / Aboriginal peoples in Canadian territories / Aboriginal peoples in Quebec / Eskimos / Nunavik / Nunatsiavut / Food security / Nunavut / Inuit / Aboriginal peoples in Canada / Hunting


L. Chan and C. Furgal Community Health Food Security, Ice, Climate and Community Health: Climate change impacts on traditional food security in Canadian Inuit communities
Add to Reading List

Document Date: 2015-01-04 15:52:33


Open Document

File Size: 426,42 KB

Share Result on Facebook

City

Centre d / Vancouver / Laval / /

Company

Inuvialuit Regional Corporation / Nunavut Tunngavik Incorporated / Social Services / Ford / Health / Donaldson / Inuit Food Security Working Group / Sikumiut Environmental Consulting / Food Security Working Group / Nunavik / /

Currency

USD / /

Event

Labor Issues / Business Partnership / Environmental Issue / /

Facility

Trent University / University of Ottawa / University of Manitoba / Australia National University / Dalhousie University / University of Northern British Columbia / York University / /

IndustryTerm

community-led food assessment / wild food access / assessment tool / wildlife management / food chain / typical ecological food chain / transportation / sea ice travel / community food planning training / food availability / food species / country food use / community food planning strategies / assessment tools / country food consumption / community food system / security working / security systems / political and economic systems / Typical travel / food use / food sector / human travel / variability impact household food / food interventions / food / security assessment tool / food consumption / food quality / survey tool / country food harvest / security assessment metric/tool / actual household food insecurity / food safety / purchase food / household food system / wild food accessibility / adaptation tool / food access / chemical / integrated modeling tool / quantitative integrated tool / food insecurity / annual traditional/ country food consumption / food harvest / /

Organization

Nasivvik Centre for Inuit Health and Changing Environments / World Health Organization / Public Health Agency of Canada / Hunters and Trappers Committee / Kativik Regional Government / University of Ottawa / University of Manitoba / Nunavik Regional Board of Health and Social Services / Public Health Agency of Canada When / Government of Nunavut / York University / Nunatsiavut Government / Nunatsiavut Department of Lands and Natural Resources / Centre d’études / Australia National University / University of Northern British Columbia / National Inuit Committee on Health / Department of Health / Trent University / Dalhousie University / /

Person

Sharon Edmunds-Potvin / Kristie Jameson / Elias Obed / Melissa Gagnon / Myriam Fillion / Arctic Indigenous / Brian Laird / Vinay Rajdev / Billy Archie / Caribou / Jean-Pierre Tremblay / Esther Lévesque / Paul McCarney / Diane Archie / Ursula King / Kristeen McTavish / Andrew Andersen / Ron Webb / Gus Dicker / Louis Rochette / Marie-Josee Gauthier / Scot Nickels / Vasiliki Douglas / Susan Bennett / John Jararuse / Boaz Bennett / Van Oostdam / Toby Kojak / Serge Déry / Diana Kouril / Sarah Karpik / Tom Sheldon / Annie Kenny / Alice Pilgrim / L. Chan / Carole Blanchet / Suzanne Bruneau / Aline Philibert / Maureen Baikie / Jennifer Organ / Steve Coté / Emily Willson / Michael Barrett / /

/

Position

model the complex relationship / dedicated senior food security analyst and policy advisor / model the relationship / communities Project Leader / King / model / hunter / systems model for food security analysis and understanding / advisors to the ISR steering committee / Objectives General / systems model for food security analysis / evident representative / /

Product

iPad / /

ProgrammingLanguage

ITK / /

ProvinceOrState

Nunavut / Newfoundland / British Columbia / Manitoba / /

Region

Northern British Columbia / /

Technology

PDF / /

SocialTag