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The Canadian Rangers: Cornerstone for Community Disaster Resilience in Canada’s Remote and Isolated Communities
Author(s) -
Peter Kikkert,
P. Whitney Lackenbauer
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
the northern review/northern review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1929-6657
pISSN - 0835-3433
DOI - 10.22584/nr51.2021.003
Subject(s) - cornerstone , government (linguistics) , resilience (materials science) , local government , psychological resilience , disaster response , community resilience , political science , emergency management , public relations , environmental planning , public administration , environmental resource management , geography , resource (disambiguation) , psychology , archaeology , environmental science , computer network , philosophy , linguistics , physics , computer science , law , psychotherapist , thermodynamics
The Canadian Rangers are Canadian Armed Forces Reservists who serve in remote, isolated, northern, and coastal communities. Due to their presence, capabilities, and the relationships they enjoy with(in) their communities, Rangers regularly support other government agencies in preparing for, responding to, and recovering from a broad spectrum of local emergency and disaster scenarios. Drawing upon government and media reports, focus groups, and interviews with serving members, and a broader literature review, this article explains and assesses, using a wide range of case studies from across Canada, how the Rangers strengthen the disaster resilience of their communities. Our findings also suggest ways to enhance the Rangers’ functional capabilities in light of climate and environmental changes that portend more frequent and severe emergencies and disasters. It also argues that the organization can serve as a model for how targeted government investment in a local volunteer force can build resilience in similar remote and isolated jurisdictions, particularly in Greenland and Alaska.

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