Ɂehdzo Got’ı̨nę Gots’ę́ Nákedı
Sahtú Renewable Resources Board

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The Délı̨nę Knowledge Centre: From Vision to Reality

Author: Denise Bayha, Walter Bayha, Irene Betsidea, Ken Caine, Dennis Kenny, Edith Mackeinzo, Deborah Simmons and Marlene Tutcho
Publication Year: 2004

This document describes developing the concept of the Délı̨nę Knowledge Centre, a project which never came to fruition but was intended to be a place for the integration of Dene and scientific knowledge. It would have addressed the themes of culture, health, and environment, while providing a location and impetus for research, intergenerational knowledge transmission, and capacity building for self-government and other future projects.

Abstract: 

The Déline Knowledge Centre vision and mission were developed through three community focus groups during January 31-February 5, 2003 as well as a facilitated workshop and public meeting on February 18-20, 2003. This article provides a brief description of the Déline Knowledge Centre and its benefits to Déline, other northern communities, and all Canadians based on the planning and activities to date that have taken place primarily within our community of Déline.

Our community of Déline, “Where the River Flows,” in the Sahtu Region of the Northwest Territories, is home to approximately 650 Dene, Métis and non-Aboriginal people. It is the only human settlement on Sahtu/Great Bear Lake, the largest lake in Canada and ninth largest in the world in terms of surface area (31,326 km) and volume. Situated within the Arctic Circle, it is the largest lake in the world that is still in a relatively pristine condition, despite historical uranium mining impacts. The Sahtugot’ine have been living with the long-term impacts of the mine that operated at Port Radium on the eastern shores of Great Bear Lake. Port Radium was originally mined for radium in the 1930s and later for uranium ore, all of which was utilized in the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima during World War II. The mine site and surrounding area are now radioactive.

Access this Resource: 

Read this article for free on Pimatisiwin. 

Bayha, Denise, Walter Bayha, Irene Betsidea, Ken Caine, Dennis Kenny, Edith Mackeinzo, Deborah Simmons, and Marlene Tutcho. “The Délı̨nę Knowledge Centre: From Vision to Reality.Pimatisiwin: A Journal of Aboriginal and Indigenous Community Health 1, no. 2 (2004): 163-172.

Additional Info

  • Publication Type: Journal Article
  • In Publication: Pimatisiwin: A Journal of Aboriginal and Indigenous Community Health
  • Keywords: Governance|Review and Evaluation
Last modified on Monday, 21 May 2018 22:33