In the summer of 2017, wildfires burned a record-breaking 1.2 million hectares throughout British Columbia driven by the combined impacts of climate change and the past century’s legacy of fire suppression and industrial forest management. Amongst the largest was the ‘Elephant Hill’ firer, which burned close to 200,000 hectares throughout the heartland of the Secwépemc Nation. The scale of this fire and its devastating impacts to Secwépemc communities and territories catalyzed these communities to action: to advocate for Secwépemc-led processes of wildfire recovery.
In partnership with researchers at the Faculty of Forestry at the University of British Columbia, the SRSS has documented Secwépemc community and provincial government experiences of the Elephant Hill wildfire and this subsequent joint leadership approach to wildfire recovery.
In our new report Elephant Hill: Secwépemc leadership and lessons learned from the collective story of wildfire recovery we:
As we face the challenges of recovering from another devastating wildfire season, addressing climate change, and meaningfully implementing the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, this report shows the critical role that First Nations can and should play in leading the work of recovering and restoring our territories.
Elephant Hill was just the beginning.
Reports (click to download reports PDF):
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