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Journal of Planning Literature
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The Split Personality of Planning

Indigenous Peoples and Planning for Land and Resource Management

Michael Hibbard

Department of Planning, Public Policy & Management, University of Oregon, mhibbard{at}uoregon.edu

Marcus B. Lane

Division of Sustainable Ecosystems, CSIRO, St. Lucia, QLD

Kathleen Rasmussen

Trust for Public Land, Seattle

The international movement toward recognition of indigenous rights over the past thirty years has created a number of complex and compelling issues in planning for the use of land and natural resources. Planning should have much to say about many of these issues, given its concern for the use of land and resources, its focus on problem-solving, and its normative disposition. There is, however, only a modest literature on indigenous planning. Thus, we draw on the planning literature, but also call heavily on work from associated disciplines to introduce to planning scholars some of the problems and opportunities indigenous communities face with respect to land and resource management.

Key Words: indigenous communities • indigenous planning • indigenous resource management • Native American community planning • reservation planning • land and resource co-management

This version was published on November 1, 2008

Journal of Planning Literature, Vol. 23, No. 2, 136-151 (2008)
DOI: 10.1177/0885412208322922


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