Indigenous Peoples and the Modern State

Indigenous Peoples and the Modern State

Indigenous Peoples and the Modern State

Indigenous Peoples and the Modern State

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Overview

Champagne and his distinguished coauthors reveal how the structure of a multinational state has the potential to create more equal and just national communities for Native peoples around the globe. Many countries still face extreme differences among ethnic groups and submerged nations, leading to marginalization and violence. Examining these inherent instabilities in multicultural nations such as the U.S., Canada, Mexico, and Guatemala, the authors confront problems of coerced assimilation for indigenous communities whose identities predate the formation of the nation states, often by thousands of years. The contributors show how indigenous people seek to preserve their territory, their rights to self-government, and their culture. This book is a valuable resource for Native American, Canadian and Latin American studies; comparative indigenous governments; constitutional law; and international relations.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780759114807
Publisher: AltaMira Press
Publication date: 06/09/2005
Series: Contemporary Native American Communities , #14
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 208
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Duane Champagne is Professor of Sociology and Director of the Native Nations Law and Policy Center at the University of California, Los Angeles. Karen Jo Torjesen is Dean of the School of Religion, and Margo L. Goldsmith Professor of Women's Studies in Religion, Claremont Graduate University. Susan Steiner is Associate Vice President for Research and Sponsored Programs at Claremont Graduate University and has received degrees in both literature and religion. She has long been active in civil rights, grass roots community, and political, as well as academic and cultural, issues. A writer, as well as a speaker, she has given workshops throughout the United States and has a novel and play in progress.

Table of Contents

1 Preface 2
Chapter I: Indigenous Identity and the State 3
Chapter 1: Rethinking Native Relations with Contemporary Nation-States 4
Chapter 2: Crossing Borders/Border Crossings: Native American Identity 5
Chapter 3: Status Indian: Who Defines You? 6
Chapter 4: Discussion of Indigenous Identity and the State 7
Chapter II: Culture and Economics 8
Chapter 5: The Culture of Leadership: Indigenous Leadership in a Changing Economy 9
Chapter 6: Doing our Share: Employment and Entrepreneurship in Canada's Aboriginal Community 10
Chapter 7: Discussion of Culture and Economics 11
Chapter III. Trilateral Discussions: Canada, the United States and Mexico 12
Chapter 8: We Come to Ask for Justice, Not Crumbs 13
Chapter 9: Competing Narratives: Barriers Between Indigenous Peoples and the Canadian State 14
Chapter 10: The Mayan Quest for Pluricultural Autonomy in Mexico and Guatemala 15
Chapter 11: Indigenous, Cosmopolitan, and Integrative Medicine in the Americas 16
Chapter 12: Discussion of Trilateral Exchanges between Canada, the United States and Mexico 17 Index 18 About the Authors
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