In doing so, it should be noted that the monetary aspect of Inuit subsistence, of which sport hunt employment is a part is generally overlooked or even repudiated by opponents of polar bear sport hunting [8]. Further, in the present discussion, the term “subsistence”, while having important socio-cultural content [9], [10], [11] and [12], is limited here in its meaning to the hunting of food species (ringed seal, caribou and the like) by Inuit for their domestic consumption. In essence, this paper is concerned with the material subsistence benefits that accrue to Inuit as individuals and communities from the sport hunt provision of the ACPB.