Subsistence Sharing Networks and Cooperation: Kaktovik, Wainwright, and Venetie, Alaska

This study documented and analyzed social networks of sharing and cooperation that are part of Alaska Native subsistence-cash economies, and explored the potential vulnerability and resilience of Alaska rural communities to conditions of social and ecological change. The study was undertaken in response to the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM), formerly Mineral Management Services (MMS) Statement of Work NSL-AK-05-04. Research activities were initiated in spring of 2008 with the survey instrument administered from October 2010 to May 2011. The study engaged two North Slope Alaska coastal communities, Kaktovik and Wainwright (Iñupiat), and one rural interior Alaska community, Venetie (Gwich’in), in partnerships to complete the research. Wainwright and Kaktovik were invited to participate because of BOEM’s mandate to study the potential impacts of offshore energy development. Venetie was included as a contrasting interior Alaska community that is not exposed to offshore development, and thus served as a “control.”

Data and Resources

Additional Info

Field Value
Maintainer Gary Kofinas
Last Updated December 17, 2019, 10:03 (AKST)
Created December 17, 2019, 10:03 (AKST)
Status Complete
Other Agencies EPSCoR - Alaska Adapting to Changing Environments, US Bureau of Ocean Energy Management
Other Contacts Shauna B. BurnSilver, Jim Magdanz (Email: jim.magdanz@alaska.gov), Rhian Stotts, Marcy Okada, Naomi O'Neal