Book

Disputed waters: Native Americans and the Great Lakes fishery

University Press of KentuckyLexington, Ky. • Published In 1990 • Pages:

By: Doherty, Robert.

Abstract
This book is mostly an account of a twelve-year dispute between Michigan's Ojibwas (Ottawa and Chippewa bands) and the state of Michigan over fishing rights in the Great Lakes. The state of Michigan represented the sports fishing industry which had replaced the earlier fur, lumber, and commercial fishing industries as northern Michigan's major industry. In 1966, the government began to stock fish in the Great Lakes watershed in response to the ecological devastation wrought by lampreys and alewives to the fisheries. This was the beginning of a booming sports fishing industry catering to middle class whites. Local Ojibwas who continued to fish commercially were soon in a fish allocation struggle with the sports fishermen. A resulting court case recognized their aboriginal rights to fishing. An intensely political struggle followed that attempted to impose state rights over the fisheries. An arrangement was finally made out of court that allocated fishing by zones, in which weaker parties such as white commercial fishermen and small-boat Ojibwa fishermen lost out. Except for the first two chapters there is little here on actual Ojibwa traditional or contemporary culture outside of fishing.
Subjects
History
Fishing
Marine industries
Real property
External relations
Trial procedure
culture
Ojibwa
HRAF PubDate
2000
Region
North America
Sub Region
Arctic and Subarctic
Document Type
Book
Evaluation
Creator Type
Unknown
Document Rating
4: Excellent Secondary Data
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
Ian Skoggard ; 1998
Field Date
1980-1989
Coverage Date
1966-1989
Coverage Place
Twentieth Century Ojibwa, Michigan, United States
Notes
Robert Doherty
Includes bibliographical references (p. 156-168) and index
LCCN
90039198
LCSH
Ojibwa Indians