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Graeme Lee Rowlands

Excluding Indigenous voices at Columbia River Treaty talks puts salmon restoration at risk

Opinion | BY GRAEME LEE ROWLANDS | October 26, 2018
With the renegotiation of the Columbia River Treaty, there’s an opportunity to bring the salmon back home to the upper Columbia through a collaborative international-restoration program, writes Graeme Lee Rowlands, a researcher at Quest University Canada, a private university in Squamish, B.C. Photograph courtesy of Pixabay
Opinion | BY GRAEME LEE ROWLANDS | October 26, 2018
Opinion | BY GRAEME LEE ROWLANDS | October 26, 2018
With the renegotiation of the Columbia River Treaty, there’s an opportunity to bring the salmon back home to the upper Columbia through a collaborative international-restoration program, writes Graeme Lee Rowlands, a researcher at Quest University Canada, a private university in Squamish, B.C. Photograph courtesy of Pixabay
Opinion | BY GRAEME LEE ROWLANDS | October 26, 2018
With the renegotiation of the Columbia River Treaty, there’s an opportunity to bring the salmon back home to the upper Columbia through a collaborative international-restoration program, writes Graeme Lee Rowlands, a researcher at Quest University Canada, a private university in Squamish, B.C. Photograph courtesy of Pixabay
Opinion | BY GRAEME LEE ROWLANDS | October 26, 2018
Opinion | BY GRAEME LEE ROWLANDS | October 26, 2018
With the renegotiation of the Columbia River Treaty, there’s an opportunity to bring the salmon back home to the upper Columbia through a collaborative international-restoration program, writes Graeme Lee Rowlands, a researcher at Quest University Canada, a private university in Squamish, B.C. Photograph courtesy of Pixabay