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Native Indian cultural centres : a planning analysisKoulas, Heather Marshall January 1987 (has links)
Native Indian Cultural Centres have grown out of the on-going struggle for native self-determination and are rapidly becoming a focus for native cultural revitalization.
This thesis investigates the evolution of two Northwest Coast native Indian cultural centres--the 'Ksan Village and the Makah Cultural and Research Centre (MCRC)—through each stage of development, outlining the historical, cultural, economic and social context, the form and function of conceptual development and the planned and unplanned processes involved in building and operating each centre.
Analysis has indicated that 'Ksan and the MCRC have evolved as a response to local cultural and economic pressures and opportunities and have been funded primarily on the basis of economic rather than cultural viability. Six factors were found to be collectively sufficient to promote the successful development of each cultural centre: local cultural knowledge, social mobilization, local project relevance, native Indian control, access to resources and common motivational ground.
The relationship between native Indians and non-native specialists is changing. Native people are no longer allowing non-native specialists to define their culture and interpret their heritage and 'Ksan and the MCRC have positively re-inforced that change. The development of native Indian cultural centres has provided an important step in the on-going native struggle for self-determination by providing a focus and/or forum for native cultural identity and is likely to continue in the future. / Applied Science, Faculty of / Community and Regional Planning (SCARP), School of / Graduate
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Teaching civilization : gender, sexuality, race and class in two late nineteenth-century British Columbia missionsGreenwell, Kim 05 1900 (has links)
Despite the recent proliferation of work around the subject of residential schools, few
analyses have deconstructed the concept of "civilizing the Indian" which animated the
schools' agendas. This thesis examines the discourse of "civilization" as it was expressed
and enacted in two missions in late nineteenth-century British Columbia. Archival primary
sources and published secondary sources are drawn on to provide an understanding of what
"civilization" meant to Euro-Canadians, specifically missionaries, and how it was to be
"taught" to the indigenous peoples they encountered. Colonial images and photographs, in
particular, reveal how missionaries constructed a vivid and compelling contrast between
"civilization" and "savagery." An intersectional framework is employed to highlight the
ways in which ideas about "race," class, gender and sexuality were essential elements of the
"civilizing" project. The goal of the thesis is to show how "civilizing the Indian" was
premised not only on a specifically hierarchical construction of Whites versus Natives, but
also intersecting binaries of men versus women, normal productive heterosexuality versus
deviant degenerate sexuality, bourgeois domesticity versus lower class depravity, and others.
Ultimately, it is argued, the discourse of "civilization" regulated both the "colonized" and the
"colonizers" as it secured the hierarchical foundations of empire and nation. / Arts, Faculty of / Anthropology, Department of / Graduate
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Waging Care in Anishnabe Aki: The Algonquins of Barriere Lake and Sixties Scoop Diasporas Against Canada's Economy of Indigenous Child RemovalKristjansson, Margaux L. January 2021 (has links)
This dissertation proceeds from the Algonquins of Barriere Lake’s enactments of Indigenous law as a praxis of care against colonial systems that commoditize Anishnabe children and land. It emerges from a co-designed nation and community-specific ethnographic and archival study with the Algonquins of Barriere Lake to analyze the Youth Protection system, and a co-designed ethnographic and archival project with the Ottawa-based Sixties Scoop Network on healing, displacement, and reparations for the 60s Scoop. Through using the land, Barriere Lake maintain their sacred connections to animals, ancestors and water. This dissertation thinks care in three registers: as Anishnabe ‘physical, emotional and spiritual’ relations of care on land, as daily assertions of Indigenous legal praxis, and as critiques of settler political economy.
In November 2015, members of the Algonquins of Barriere Lake rallied at the offices of the CISSSO, a Quebec Youth Protection agency in Maniwaki, Quebec that has placed 147 children from their 792-person First Nation into out of home care since 1990. Barriere Lake mothers held signs asserting “Our children are not commodities.” Throughout the fall of 2015, the community held a camp to protect their lands from exploratory drilling by the junior mining company Copper One; a sign declaring ‘This land is not for sale.’ As CISSSO (2019) secures nearly $2 million annually by taking Barriere Lake children from their kin settler industries extract over $100 million in resources from Barriere Lake’s territories. Canada’s genocidal church-run, state-mandated Residential Schools system was instituted as the nascent nation began to create its wealth and home from Native lands and resources. Between 1951-1991 (the Sixties Scoop), over 22 500 Indigenous children were removed from their kin into predominantly non-native homes (Brown v Canada 2017). In 2016, Canada’s national resources sector accounted for $216 billion; while in 2018 the child welfare system generated $2.5 billion and billions more in family stipends and allowances from a system in which over 52.5% of children are Indigenous (StatsCan 2016, 2018).
The gendered fiscal and libidinal economies of Canadian colonialism incentivize the apprehension of Indigenous children and criminalize Indigenous caregivers, especially mothers (2016 CHRT 2). By examining how present systems reproduce the gendered violence of child-taking and abuse systematized in Residential Schools, this dissertation argues that Canada securitizes its economy of extraction from Indigenous lands through the mass abduction of Indigenous children into the child welfare system. Algonquin Anishnabeg jurisdiction is asserted as a praxis of care which, waged daily along with Sixties Scoop survivor struggles for justice, unwinds the fabric of a system of child-taking and land-theft.
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The late survival of pithouse architecture in the Kayenta Anasazi areaHobler, Philip M. January 1964 (has links)
No description available.
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Post-high school adjustments of special education and regular education students from the Apache reservation: A five year follow-up study.Rangasamy, Ramasamy. January 1992 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to describe and compare the post-school adjustment of Native American youth who received special education or regular education services on White Mountain Apache Indian reservation in Arizona. This study reflects what the students have been doing since they left school, whether their school experiences have prepared them for life in general, and how their personal history helps identify their values, outlooks, and current community standing. In an effort to assess the transition status of these former students, a 38 item survey instrument was developed. A total of 132 students were identified from the Alchesay high school records. Of this number, face-to-face interviews were conducted with 106 former (80%) students. Students were compared in five areas which have been identified as important to successful transition from school to adult life. Comparisons were made on the respondents opinions of their secondary school education, employment status, independent living, maladjustment, and culture/traditionality. SES stated that mathematics, resource programs, and English prepared them for the job market whereas mathematics, office skills, science, and business education were selected by the RES. All the respondents wished for computer education. Only 31% of the total sample was employed up to five years after leaving school. Seventy-four percent of the students still live with their parents. Forty-four percent of both groups had arrest records, and 68% of both groups had a history of substance abuse. Sixty-four percent of the respondents use and speak the Apache language most of the time. Parents and the extended family provide the majority of guidance and support as these young adults seek employment, community integration and social adjustment. There is a pressing need for transitional programs, better job programs, and substance abuse preventive programs for both groups of Apache post-high school students.
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Shaping the clay: Pueblo pottery, cultural sponsorship and regional identity in New Mexico.Dauber, Kenneth Wayne. January 1993 (has links)
Taste--an appreciation for some things, a disdain for others--is usually understood by sociologists as playing a key role in struggles for position within closed, hierarchical status systems. Yet taste that reaches across cultural and social boundaries is a common phenomenon in a world of mobility and falling barriers to travel and access. This study argues that this expression of taste also has a political dimension, through an examination of the sponsorship of traditional Pueblo Indian pottery by Anglo newcomers to northern New Mexico in the 1920s and 1930s. The organization that these newcomers founded, the Indian Arts Fund, played an important role in building a differentiated market for Pueblo pottery, supported by an increasingly complex body of knowledge and evaluation. This intervention into the market for pottery, and into the definition of Pueblo culture, served to insert the Indian Arts Fund's members into regional society, against the resistance of older, more established elites. A visible association with Pueblo pottery linked newcomers to the transformation of the regional economy by tourism, which had shifted the source of value in northern New Mexico from natural resources to the marketing of particularity and difference. An examination of the role of pottery production, and income from pottery, in Pueblo communities reveals that the relationship between pottery and Pueblo culture was more complex, and more tangential, than the image that was being constructed in the context of the market.
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Urban Native American Educational Attitudes: Impact of Educational Background and Childhood ResidencyWood, Paul Adair 12 August 1992 (has links)
The purpose of this thesis is to study the relationship between educational attitudes and certain background features of Native Americans, in particular, where they were raised and what type of school they attended. The sample used consisted of 120 completed mail out-mail back surveys that were used primarily as a Needs Assessment for the Portland Indian Health clinic. The sample was randomly selected from the Portland Indian Health Clinic client/patient mailing list. The findings of this thesis indicate that the attitudes of Native Americans toward education in general are positive. The findings also indicate that older Native Americans who experienced being sent to a B.I.A. boarding school off the reservation have the least positive attitudes towards Indian Education programs. Implications and recommendation for further research are discussed.
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Microscopic analysis utilized in the identification of cutting, scraping and whittling activities on flake tools from the Qwu?gwes (45TN240), Hartstene, and Sunken Village (35MU4) sites in the central northwest coast of North AmericaLoffler, German, January 2007 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.A in anthropology)--Washington State University, December 2007. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 97-105)
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The long and short of it : the reliability and inter-populational applicability of stature regression equationsMcCarthy, Donna 26 November 2001 (has links)
In this thesis, stature reconstruction of three
prehistoric/protohistoric Native American populations
(from Alaska, the Aleutian Islands, and South Dakota)
was performed using the Fully Anatomical method in order
to formulate regression equations and analyze the
ability of regression equations of other researchers to
accurately estimate the statures within my study
populations. The calculation of regression equations
demonstrated that even though there was a significant
difference in the statures of the three populations,
they were similar enough in body proportions such that
regression equations from the pooled sample could be
used to accurately estimate statures from all three
groups as well as 12 randomly chosen individuals from
outside the study sample.
Results of statures calculated using the regression
formulae of other researchers on my sample populations
forced me to conclude that there is too much variation
between populations to allow for much inter-populational
applicability except in those cases where the
populations are similar enough in proportion. For my
study groups, the best equations for estimating statures
(besides the ones formulated specifically for them) were
those of Sciulli et al. for Ohio native Americans,
followed closely by Trotter and Gleser's 1952 and 1958
equations. The femur/stature ratio of Feldesman et al
(1990) performed relatively poorly, and the formulae of
Genoves' for Mesoamericans (1967) were the least
accurate.
While individual statures may be more highly
influenced by genes, the mean statures of populations or
homogeneous geographical groups is more controlled by
common levels of nutrition, stress, and environment of
the individuals within that group. The Arikara were the
tallest population: the female mean of that group were
as tall as the male means from both the Alaskan and
Aleutian populations. The populations in this study
differed in their degree of sexual dimorphism, with the
Arikara individuals showing the greatest stature
difference and dimorphism between males and females. The
distal limb bones of the arms and the legs of the individuals from both Alaska and the Aleutian Islands
show significant shortening when compared to those of
the Arikara, supporting "biogeographical" rules of human
adaptations to chronically cold environments.
The results of this study illustrate how important
it is for researchers to keep studying (and publishing
regression equations for) statures of prehistoric and
historic populations. Until someone develops a formulae
that can truly be applied to populations everywhere-as
the femur/stature ratio and the line of organic
correlation attempted to-there is too much variation
between groups to allow researchers to continue to apply
equations not applicable to their population. / Graduation date: 2002
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Resiliency and risk in Native American communities a culturally informed investigation /Belcourt-Dittloff, Annjeanette E. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Montana, 2006. / Title from title screen. Description based on contents viewed Mar. 29, 2007. Includes bibliographical references (p. 109-125).
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