Non-Indigenous Partners
The Skutik Indigenous Protected and Cultural Area has built numerous strategic and innovative partnerships. With learnings, teachings, sharing, and collaboration at our core, we are thrilled to work with the following organizations to advance Indigenous Protected and Conserved/Cultural Areas across Turtle Island.
Nature Trust of New Brunswick
The Nature Trust of New Brunswick is a charitable land conservation organization which focuses on conserving and stewarding private land and engaging New Brunswickers about the importance of protecting our province’s unique natural heritage and biodiversity.
Nature Conservancy of Canada
The interconnection of people and nature is the Nature Conservancy of Canada’s (NCC’s) foundation; the idea that we are all one with nature. Together, through purposeful actions, we have the opportunity to build toward a greater good — a thriving world. Because when nature thrives, people thrive.
American Friends of Canadian Conservation
American Friends of Canadian Conservation partners with Canadian conservation organizations and American owners of environmentally and ecologically significant lands to protect Canada’s natural lands, clean water, abundant habitat, and quality of life for citizens of both countries.
Community Forests International
Community Forests International works in Canada and Zanzibar to protect and restore forests, help communities adapt to climate change, build economic prosperity, and champion social equality.
New Brunswick Museum
The New Brunswick Museum is New Brunswick’s provincial museum. As such, it is a principal repository and steward of material that documents or represents the natural and human history of New Brunswick and other related regions. In partnership with institutions and communities we collect, preserve, research and interpret material to foster a greater understanding and appreciation of New Brunswick provincially and globally.
Eastern Charlotte Waterways
ECW’s purpose is to protect the environment and its biodiversity for the benefit of the public by providing knowledge, skills, and expertise to empower persons, partners, and communities. They conduct research, community planning, and projects on environmental sustainability issues including watershed management, coastal management, environmental monitoring, renewable energy, energy conservation and efficiency, green transportation, sustainable food systems, waste reduction, climate change adaptation, and sustainable community planning.
Conservation Council of New Brunswick
The Conservation Council has been working on environmental issues in New Brunswick since 1969 as an environmental non-profit organization (ENGO). Their mission is to create awareness of environmental problems and advocate solutions through research, education and interventions in collaboration with others. This includes effectively communicating environmental policy initiatives to the general public and decision makers, and influencing government decision makers to implement the policies needed to protect our air, water and land.