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Overfishing in Japan, a thriving black market, and even the Fukushima nuclear disaster are all fanning the flames of fishing disputes involving tribes in Nova Scotia and Maine. Eels cannot reproduce in captivity. So juvenile glass eels, known as elvers, are a valuable commodity for Japanese aquaculture. They supply demand for a popular traditional dish in Japan. That demand is so high, it is threatening eel fisheries to the point that Canada is shutting down commercial seasons. Tribes maintain their treaty right to fish despite the government’s mandate. That’s causing rifts with non-Indigenous fishers and government officials.
GUESTS
Corey Hinton (citizen of the Passamaquoddy Tribe), attorney at Drummond Woodsum
Jonathan Smith (Shinnecock), tribal fishing rights advocate
Dr. Rick Williams, president of Praxis Research and Consulting, Inc.
Break 1 Music: For Wade (song) Silver Jackson (artist) It’s Glimmering Now (album)
Break 2 Music: Sila [feat. Tanya Tagaq] (song) The Halluci Nation (artist) We Are the Halluci Nation (album)