Price Paid: The Fight for First Nations Survival
Price Paid: The Fight for First Nations Survival untangles truth from some of the myths about First Nations at the same time that it addresses misconceptions still widely believed today.
The second book by award-winning author Bev Sellars, Price Paid is based on a popular presentation Sellars created for treaty-makers, politicians, policymakers, and educators when she discovered they did not know the historic reasons they were at the table negotiating First Nations rights.
The book begins with glimpses of foods, medicines, and cultural practices North America’s indigenous peoples have contributed for worldwide benefit. It documents the dark period of regulation by racist laws during the twentieth century, and then discusses new emergence in the twenty-first century into a re-establishment of Indigenous land and resource rights. The result is a candidly told personal take on the history of a culture's fight for their rights and survival. It is Canadian history told from a First Nations point of view.

Awards and recognition for Bev Sellars’s They Called Me Number One: Secrets and Survival at an Indian Residential School
− 2014 George Ryga Award for Social Awareness in Literature
− 2014 Burt Award for First Nations, Métis, and Inuit Literature (third prize)
− Shortlisted for the 2014 Hubert Evans Non-Fiction Prize (B.C. Book Prizes)
− More than 40 weeks on the B.C. bestsellers list

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Price Paid: The Fight for First Nations Survival
Price Paid: The Fight for First Nations Survival untangles truth from some of the myths about First Nations at the same time that it addresses misconceptions still widely believed today.
The second book by award-winning author Bev Sellars, Price Paid is based on a popular presentation Sellars created for treaty-makers, politicians, policymakers, and educators when she discovered they did not know the historic reasons they were at the table negotiating First Nations rights.
The book begins with glimpses of foods, medicines, and cultural practices North America’s indigenous peoples have contributed for worldwide benefit. It documents the dark period of regulation by racist laws during the twentieth century, and then discusses new emergence in the twenty-first century into a re-establishment of Indigenous land and resource rights. The result is a candidly told personal take on the history of a culture's fight for their rights and survival. It is Canadian history told from a First Nations point of view.

Awards and recognition for Bev Sellars’s They Called Me Number One: Secrets and Survival at an Indian Residential School
− 2014 George Ryga Award for Social Awareness in Literature
− 2014 Burt Award for First Nations, Métis, and Inuit Literature (third prize)
− Shortlisted for the 2014 Hubert Evans Non-Fiction Prize (B.C. Book Prizes)
− More than 40 weeks on the B.C. bestsellers list

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Price Paid: The Fight for First Nations Survival

Price Paid: The Fight for First Nations Survival

by Bev Sellars
Price Paid: The Fight for First Nations Survival

Price Paid: The Fight for First Nations Survival

by Bev Sellars

Paperback

$19.95 
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Overview

Price Paid: The Fight for First Nations Survival untangles truth from some of the myths about First Nations at the same time that it addresses misconceptions still widely believed today.
The second book by award-winning author Bev Sellars, Price Paid is based on a popular presentation Sellars created for treaty-makers, politicians, policymakers, and educators when she discovered they did not know the historic reasons they were at the table negotiating First Nations rights.
The book begins with glimpses of foods, medicines, and cultural practices North America’s indigenous peoples have contributed for worldwide benefit. It documents the dark period of regulation by racist laws during the twentieth century, and then discusses new emergence in the twenty-first century into a re-establishment of Indigenous land and resource rights. The result is a candidly told personal take on the history of a culture's fight for their rights and survival. It is Canadian history told from a First Nations point of view.

Awards and recognition for Bev Sellars’s They Called Me Number One: Secrets and Survival at an Indian Residential School
− 2014 George Ryga Award for Social Awareness in Literature
− 2014 Burt Award for First Nations, Métis, and Inuit Literature (third prize)
− Shortlisted for the 2014 Hubert Evans Non-Fiction Prize (B.C. Book Prizes)
− More than 40 weeks on the B.C. bestsellers list


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780889229723
Publisher: Talonbooks, Limited
Publication date: 10/11/2016
Pages: 187
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x 0.75(d)

About the Author

Bev Sellars is a former Chief and Councillor of the Xat’sull (Soda Creek) First Nation in Williams Lake, British Columbia. First elected chief of Xat’sull in 1987, a position she held from 1987-1993 and then from 2009-2015. She also worked as a community advisor for the BC Treaty Commission. Ms. Sellars served as the representative for the Secwepemc communities on the Cariboo Chilcotin Justice Inquiry in the early 1990s. Ms. Sellars has spoken out on racism and residential schools and on the environmental and social threats of mineral resources exploitation in her region.

Ms. Sellars is the author of They Called Me Number One, a memoir of her childhood experience in the Indian residential school system and its effects on three generations of women in her family, published in 2013 by Talon Books. The book won the 2014 George Ryga Award for Social Awareness, was shortlisted for the 2014 Hubert Evans Non-Fiction, and was a finalist for the 2014 Burt Award for First Nations, Métis and Inuit Literature. Her book, Price Paid: The Fight for First Nations Survival, published in 2016 by Talon Books, looks at the history of Indigenous rights in Canada from an Indigenous perspective. Sellars has a degree in history from the University of Victoria and a law degree from the University of British Columbia. She is currently Chair of First Nations Women Advocating Responsible Mining (FNWARM) and serves as a Senior Advisor to the Indigenous Leadership Initiative (www.ilinationhood.ca).

Table of Contents

Price Paid: Aboriginal Rights in Canada

Introduction

1876 and resistance to the Indian Act

1885 and the potlatch ban

1927 to 1951 attempts by government to restrict Aboriginal rights and land issues making it illegal to meet or fundraise for land claims, and resistance in multiple ways: through petitions by individual bands, formal statements from Indian Brotherhood and Sisterhood of B.C., Indian Homemakers’ Association, and other groups, among other forms of resistance

1969 White Paper and the National Indian Brotherhood’s response to it

early 1970s influence from the American Indian Movement (AIM)

1982 and effects of section 35 of the Canadian constitution

1992 founding of the B.C. Treaty Commission

1997 Delgamuukw and the Supreme Court of Canada’s definitive statement on aboriginal title

1999 Nisga’a agreement

2009 Tsawwassen treaty

2014 Tsilhqot’in rights and title

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