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Canada's accommodating judiciary: how the Supreme Court of Canada can actively encourage negotiations in aboriginal rights and treaty claims /Burns, John T. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.) - Carleton University, 2007. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 103-107). Also available in electronic format on the Internet.
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Cosmopolitan Indians and Mesoamerican barrios in Bourbon Mexico City tribute, community, family and work in 1800 /Granados, Luis Fernando. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Georgetown University, 2008. / Includes bibliographical references.
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Re-engineering indigeneity : Cultural brokerage, the political economy of tradition and the Santa Rosa Carib Community of Arima, Trinidad & Tobago /Forte, Maximilian C. January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Adelaide University, 2002. / Submitted to the Department of Anthropology, Adelaide University, in fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Bibliography: p. 296-352.
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The Bantu in the city a study of cultural adjustment on the Witwatersrand,Phillips, Ray E. January 1900 (has links)
"Dissertation ... accepted by the faculty of the Graduate school of Yale in candidacy for the degree of doctor of philosophy (1937)" -p. xiii. / Bibliography: p. 394-406.
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From birchbark talk to digital dreamspeaking : a history of Aboriginal media activism in Canada /Buddle, Kathleen. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--McMaster University, 2002 / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 314-332). Also available via World Wide Web.
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Conflict and conflict resolution in BoliviaStilwell, Carolyn Anne January 2007 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.A. in anthropology)--Washington State University, May 2007. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 85-90).
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Promoting Family and Community Health through Indigenous Nation SovereigntyRainie, Stephanie Carroll January 2015 (has links)
BACKGROUND: Indigenous populations in the United States (US) experience worse health outcomes and higher disease prevalence compared to the US all race population. The World Health Organization (WHO), Canadian research on Indigenous-specific determinants, the Harvard Project on American Indian Economic Development, and the Native Nation's Institute have all identified governance as a determinant that impacts community health and development. This dissertation explored the active and potential role of Indigenous nations' governance, since the Native nation building era commenced in the 1970s, in protecting and promoting family and community health. OBJECTIVES: The dissertation aims were to: (1) describe the state of population data for US Indigenous nations and benefits of engaging with data, data sovereignty, and data governance for US Indigenous nations, (2) outline the history and current state of tribal public health relative to other US public health systems, and (3) elucidate the assumptions and applicability of the social determinants of health framework to Indigenous health contexts. METHODS: This mixed-methods study integrated retrospective quantitative and primary quantitative and qualitative data from case studies with six reservation-based American Indian tribes with qualitative data collected in a focus group and two consensus panels of public health practitioners and scholars. RESULTS: The results by aim were: (1) self-determination with regard to health and other population data offers Indigenous nations opportunities to create and access relevant and reliable data to inform policy and resource allocations, (2) the federal government and others have not invested in tribal public health authority infrastructures in ways similar to investments made in federal, state, and local public health authorities, resulting in tribal public health systems falling below other public health authorities in function and capacity, and (3) underlying Euro-Centric assumptions imbedded in the social determinants of health framework reduce its applicability in Indigenous health contexts. CONCLUSIONS: This study contributes to understanding the roles of Indigenous nation self-determination and sovereignty in defining health to align with Indigenous philosophies of wellness. Guided by Indigenous-specific determinants of health, tribes can set community-based, culture-informed methods and metrics for establishing, monitoring, and assessing public health policies and programs to support healthy communities and families. RECOMMENDATIONS: Indigenous nations, in partnership with researchers and other governments as appropriate, should develop framework(s) for tribal health that include broad, shared, and nation-specific definitions of health, healthy families and communities, and health determinants. Federal, state, and local governments should partner with Indigenous nations to improve tribal public health infrastructures and to support tribal data sovereignty and data governance through building tribal data capacity, aligning data with tribal self-conceptions, and forming data sharing agreements.
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Of Rhizomes and Radio: Networking Indigenous Community Media in Oaxaca, MexicoMyers, Emily 21 November 2016 (has links)
In the face of a shifting political climate in Latin America, movements for indigenous rights and autonomy are leveraging community media in new ways transcending the state-market binary. Through ethnographic research with Zapotec media producers in Oaxaca and the supportive organizations forming points of connection between radios and activists, I argue that the strength of the indigenous community media movement in Oaxaca, and its potential to build a movement to resist destructive state and market forces, is best explained by Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari’s concept of the rhizome, which portrays Oaxacan indigenous media as a map of heterogeneous interconnections defying structural hierarchies and binaries. With this picture of a rhizomatic media movement, I demonstrate how radios have paved the way for innovations, revealing creative ways that indigenous groups are connecting with each other and the outside world, while asserting agency in their interactions with the market and the state.
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Finding law about life: a cross-cultural study of indigenous legal principles in Nishnawbe Aski NationDaniel, Meaghan 14 May 2018 (has links)
This is a cross-cultural study of Indigenous legal traditions in Nishnawbe Aski Nation (NAN), a political territorial organization in northern Ontario. By analyzing NAN’s resolutions (passed by NAN Chiefs-in-Assembly to direct NAN’s mandate), I identify legal principles.
As law arises from worldviews, law’s function is to protect the values of that worldview. This study discusses two values (creation and interdependence) as analytic tools, used to recognise legal principles. Context grounds the conclusions, as they relate to specific people and land.
Four legal principles are identified: earthbound need, sacred/natural supremacy, gifted responsibility and relational jurisdiction. These principles together reveal that law in NAN is focused on the protection of life.
Overarching the results is a broader purpose, to take up the educative work previously shouldered by NAN alone. The duty to learn is more than political obligation, but as I argue, is a matter of life itself. / Graduate / 2019-05-11
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Protecting the sacred cycle: Xwulmuxw Slhunlheni and leadershipThomas, Qwul'sih'yah'maht Robina Anne 30 March 2017 (has links)
Xwulmuxw Slhunlheni (Indigenous Women) have, since time immemorial, played
critical leadership roles in Indigenous communities. However, with the imposition of
racist/sexist colonial policies, indigenous women’s roles were systematically displaced.
As a result of these policies, which formalized colonial governance systems, the vital
informal leadership roles the Xwulmuxw Slhunlheni play rarely get recognized. This
dissertation strives to honour (or stand up) the women in our communities who continue
to embrace their important roles as givers of life and carriers of culture. Through
storytelling as a methodology, new ways of Indigenous women’s leadership are revealed.
I interviewed thirteen women from various Hul’qumi’num communities on Vancouver
Island and the Mainland, asking them to share their thoughts on leadership. What
emerged from the interviews was the importance of living our cultural and traditional
teachings. This central theme emphasized the importance of keeping the past, present and
future connected. Every one of the women discussed the importance of our teachings and
the necessity to bring those forward for the future generations. What emerged was a
model that I have coined Sacred Cycle, a model that focuses on living our values. More
importantly, the Sacred Cycle can be used as a valuable tool to resolve governance
problems and as a tool of decolonization. / Graduate
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