Strong Livelihoods is an independent organization that believes true long-term prosperity is about ensuring our lands and waters stay healthy, accessible, and working for the people who live here.
Strong Livelihoods Matter
A strong livelihood is not just a job. It is continuity.
It means knowing that the place you rely on—whether for food harvest, fishing, hunting, guiding, or natural resource jobs—will still be functional years from now.
We work from a simple premise:
Livelihoods endure only when the places that support them continue to function.
Our role is to support approaches that protect access, reduce conflict, and prevent irreversible damage—so people who rely on these places can continue to do so over time.
Who We Are
Strong Livelihoods is an independent organization founded by Northerners that works to advance practical approaches to land and water stewardship that are compatible with strong and enduring livelihoods and true long-term prosperity.
Our work is grounded in:
  • Longstanding resource-management principles
  • Experience from resource-dependent communities
  • Local community stewardship and Indigenous guardianship practices
  • Evidence from regions where unmanaged use led to collapse
We focus on long-term relationships rather than making a quick buck, continuity rather than controversy, and outcomes rather than ideology.
What We Do
  • Develop and maintain the Strong Livelihoods framework
  • Assess whether proposed initiatives meet long-term livelihood tests
  • Support initiatives that demonstrate clear benefits for access, continuity, and conflict reduction
  • Provide a neutral institutional foundation for projects aligned with these principles
Strong Livelihoods may sponsor, support, or endorse initiatives that meet these criteria. Our work is non-partisan and guided by principles, not party politics.
What the Strong Livelihoods is — and What It Is Not
What we are
  • Practical
  • Place-based
  • Outcomes-focused
  • Long-term
What we are not
  • Not a political party or movement
  • Not a fundraising platform
  • Not an advocacy brand
  • Not a call to end use
Strong Livelihoods is about real outcomes that build up the people who live here.
What We Mean by “Strong Livelihoods”
A strong livelihood is more than short-term opportunity. It is the ability to rely on a place—year after year—for food, work, income, and community stability. Strong livelihoods are the cornerstone of long-term prosperity.
Strong livelihoods depend on three conditions:
Access that lasts
Access only matters if it continues over time. When overuse or unmanaged pressure degrades a place, access disappears—often permanently.
Lasting access requires limits that prevent collapse, crowding, and conflict.
Rules that are visible and enforced
Predictable rules reduce conflict and protect effort and investment.
Strong livelihoods depend on rules people can see, understand, and rely on—so effort is rewarded, not undermined.
Continuity over boom-and-bust
Stability supports families and communities; volatility does not.
Strong livelihoods are built on stability, not spikes.
Who Our Approach Serves
Strong Livelihoods is grounded in the realities of people who depend on land and water directly.
That includes:
  • Trades, local contractors, and owner-operators
  • Hunters and anglers who rely on continued access
  • Guides and outfitters
  • Indigenous Guardians and stewardship workers
  • Families and northern communities built around these activities
Different roles. Different traditions. Shared reliance on places that still work.
Stewardship That Works
Strong livelihoods depend on people who are present, trained, and accountable.
Strong livelihoods depend on stewardship that is practical and present.
In many regions, Indigenous guardianship programs and community stewardship initiatives provide:
  • On-the-ground monitoring
  • Early detection of problems
  • Consistent enforcement
  • Local authority and continuity
This is not symbolic.

It is operational capacity that benefits everyone who depends on the resource.
A Note on Rules and Responsibility
Strong livelihoods are not maintained by promises and good intentions alone. We need:
Clear boundaries
Consistent enforcement
Shared responsibility
Willingness to stop damage early
Ignoring problems until collapse is not freedom. It is negligence—with predictable consequences.
The Fundamentals
The Strong Livelihoods framework draws on:
Longstanding land-use and fisheries management principles
Indigenous stewardship practice
Resource-dependent community experience
Evidence from regions where unmanaged use led to collapse
This approach is deliberately practical, not ideological.
When it comes to our lands and waters, clear rules matter.
For prosperity, for everyone.
Rules are about protecting livelihoods and prosperity over the long-term.
Every working landscape has a breaking point. When pressure exceeds what a place can absorb, the damage does not fall evenly. It lands first—and hardest—on local users.
Without rules:
  • Access becomes crowded and chaotic
  • Bad actors push out responsible ones
  • Conflict increases
  • The resource declines
  • Everyone loses leverage
With rules:
  • Access remains predictable
  • Investment of time and skill still pays off
  • Conflict is reduced
  • Recovery is possible
  • Livelihoods persist
Rules are not the opposite of use. They are what make use possible over time.

Unevenly enforced rules do not preserve freedom—they create conflict, transfer costs forward, and cause long-term harm.
Let's keep our working landscapes working. For the long haul.
Strong Livelihoods come from local people deeply committed to the long-term health and accessibility of lands and waters that sustain working families.
Our Governance
Strong Livelihoods is an independent organization that works to ensure land and water remain healthy, accessible, and productive for the long term.

The Directors of Strong Livelihoods are Northern BC residents with professional experience and expertise in long term regional development, resource management, and Indigenous and local community stewardship.
We are committed to evidence, reason, and the power of local people in decision-making.
Contact
For inquiries related to the Strong Livelihoods framework or if you are interested in supporting our work, contact:

info@stronglivelihoods.org
Strong Livelihoods Association
4647 Lakelse Ave #102,
Terrace, BC V8G 1R0