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George Wenzel

Inuit-Eskimo Society and Culture, Cultural Ecology, Wildlife Management Conflicts and Hunter-Gatherer Economies

Professor Emerita in the Department of Geography

Office: Burnside Hall, Room 623
Tel.: (514) 398-4346
Fax.: (514) 398-7437

george.wenzel [at] mcgill.ca (E-mail)


Academic background

  • PhD Geography, 㽶Ƶ (1980)
  • MA Anthropology, University of Manitoba (1971)
  • BA Anthropology, Beloit College (1969)

Research Interests

Contemporary Canadian Inuit Culture and Society; Hunter-Gatherer Ecology; Non-Cash Economies; Wildlife Management Conflicts; Traditional Ecological Knowledge Systems


Current Projects

  • Women and Modern Inuit Subsistence
  • The Opportunity Costs of Wage Employment in Nunavut
  • Traditional Resources and Food Security

Publications

2019a Introduction: Reflections on Inuit and Subsistence in the 21st Century. Wenzel, G.W. and D. Natcher. Hunter Gatherer Research 3(4):559-566.

2019b Canadian Inuit Subsistence: Antimonies of the Mixed Economy. Hunter and Gatherer Research 3(4): 567-581.

2019c Men Hunt, Women Share: Gender and Contemporary Inuit Subsistence Relations. Quintal-Marineau, M. and G.W. Wenzel. In Towards a Broader View of Hunter-Gatherer Sharing. Noa Lavi and David Friesem, eds. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Pp.211-220

2018 Hunting (Merkel, R., A. Franke, F. Ungarte, S. Statham, S. Ferguson, G. Wenzel,C. Hotson, G. Gauthier, D. Lee and D. Berteaux). In Adaptation Actions for a Changing Arctic: Perspectives from the Baffin Bay-Davis Strait Region. Pp.177-194. Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Program (AMAP). Oslo, Norway.

2017a Inuit and Narwhal (Wenzel, G.W. and D.S. Lee). In Narwhal: Revealing An Arctic Legend. Ed. by W. Fitzhugh and M. Nweeia. Arctic Studies Center, Hanover, New Hampshire: Smithsonian Institution and IPI Press. Pp.105-122.

2017b Food Politics: Finding a Place for Country Food in Canada’s Northern Food Policy (Stephenson, E. and G.W. Wenzel). Northern Policy Review 5(1):49-51.

2016a Inuit Culture: To Have and Have Not, or Has Subsistence Become an Anachronism?” In Why Forage?: Hunter-Gatherers in the Twenty-First Century. Ed. by B. Codding and K. Kramer. Alburquerque, N.M.: SAR and University of New Mexico Press. Pp. 43-60.

2016b Cross-Cultural Demographic and Social Variables for Contemporary Foraging Populations (Kramer, K., N. Blurton-Jones, R. Bliege-Bird…G.W. Wenzel. In Why Forage?: Hunter-Gatherers in the 21st Century. Ed. by
K. Kramer and B. Codding. Alburquerque, N.M.: SAR and University of New Mexico Press.

2016c Wild Resources, Harvest Data and Food Security in Nunavut’s Qikiqtaaluk Region. (Wenzel, G.W., J. Dolan and C. Brown) Arctic 69(2):147-159, plus Table S1 (on-line).

2013 Inuit and Modern Hunter-Gatherer Subsistence. Éٳܻ/Գܾ/ٳܻ徱 37(2):181-200.

2012 Inuit Subsistence, Social Economy and Food Security in Clyde River, Nunavut (M. Harder and G.W. Wenzel). Arctic 65(3):305-318.

2011 Polar Bear Management, Sport Hunting and Inuit Subsistence at Clyde River, Nunavut. Journal of Marine Policy 35(4):457-465.

Unpublished Reports

2002a Report: “Outfitted Polar Bear Hunting in the Qikiqtaaluk and Kitikmeot Regions of Nunavut: Implications for Local Economic Development and Species Conservation”. Department of Sustainable Development, Government of Nunavut. 106pp.

Research

2001-2004: Principal Investigator. “Inuit, Money and Traditional Resources in Nunavut: Modelling the Contemporary Economy.” Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada.

2000-2001: Principal Investigator. "Polar Bear Management in the Qikiqtaalik Region of Nunavut: Inuit, Outfitted Hunting, and Conservation.” Government of Nunavut and Safari Club International.

1999: Principal Investigator. "The Structure of Inuit Sharing". Department of Sustainable Development, Government of Nunavut

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