The change in climate is still something more to be read ... Nanasi and Markoosi getting ready to hunt Narwhals. Not so for the Inuit people of Clyde River. The tiny community of about 1,000 ...
Amid dizzying changes caused by a warming climate and global attention, Greenlanders don’t want to have to choose between ...
(Submitted by Reuben Flowers ) Climate change, says Flowers, disrupts the land and ice that have sustained Inuit people physically, emotionally, spiritually and mentally since time immemorial.
This paper is an exploration of what a 'human rights approach' to climate change can offer Inuit communities. It analyzes the potential contribution of the discourse of human right to housing, which ...
Amid a warming climate and disappearing traditional ... tent at the annual spring camp where she helps young people learn traditional Inuit skills. Passing down ancestral hunting and survival ...
Ian Mauro (Seeds of Change) have teamed up with Inuit communities to document their knowledge and experience regarding climate change. This documentary, the world's first Inuktitut language film ...
Greenlanders in recent years have been embracing pre-Christian Inuit traditions like drum dancing or getting Inuit tattoos ...
They become roads for people to traverse and hunt for food and materials such as arctic char, seal and firewood. Climate change, says Flowers, disrupts the land and ice that have sustained Inuit ...
It is difficult, if not impossible, for any person living in Canada today, Inuit or non-Inuit, to imagine what it was like to ...
Unikkaaqtuat” sheds substantial light on a tradition that took form among people who were dispersed thinly and widely across ...