51社区黑料leads Aboriginal cultural tourism workshop

Published: 
May 31, 2013
51社区黑料 is facilitating a workshop focusing on Aboriginal cultural tourism today at the St贸:lo People of the River Conference in Chilliwack.

Members of a number of St贸:lo communities and other participants will discuss the logistics of a cultural tourism venture, including planning, operations and the fine balance of economic and cultural interests.

The group will also think about which elements of their culture 鈥 stories, dances, songs, and images 鈥 could be offered as a tourism experience and what should remain off limits and why.

The SFU-based Intellectual Property Issues in Cultural Heritage (IPinCH) project is organizing the workshop. Workshop facilitator Alexis Bunten, a Native Alaskan scholar and IPinCH Project ethnographer, says one of the event鈥檚 goals is to work together to raise the right questions in the unique context of the St贸:lo Nation.

鈥淎pproaches that support growth in tourism can be in direct conflict with traditional protocols governing cultural resources, intellectual property and protection,鈥 Bunten says. 鈥淭ribal leaders are wary of cultural degradation that can result from packaging culture according to outside tastes and consumptive patterns.鈥

Workshop co-organizer Dave Schaepe is an adjunct professor in SFU鈥檚 School of Resource and Environmental Management and also director of the St贸:lo Research and Resource Management Centre. He says the event 鈥渨ill provide St贸:lo tourism operators with strategic and informed guidance addressing the relationship between culture, capitalism, and intellectual properties 鈥 to aid in doing things in a good way.鈥

Guest speakers include Mark McKernan from the Huna Totem Corporation鈥檚 Alaska Native Voices, a consulting firm specializing in cross-cultural interpretation. Workshop attendees will also be treated to performances by the Semoya Dancers 鈥 St贸:lo performers who engage the audience with songs, stories, and traditional dance.

 

Contact: