By Joanne DiNova
August 02, 2012
This work builds on indigenous theory as evident in the writing of Willie Ermine, Gregory Cajete, Craig Womack, Jace Weaver, Laurie Anne Whitt, Linda Tuhiwai Smith, Voila Cordova, Dennis McPherson, and others. It works towards a criticism that, in accordance with the precepts of such theory, is ...
By Lynn Swartley
January 27, 2017
First published in 2003. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company....
By Ciaran O'Faircheallaigh
January 24, 2018
Negotiated agreements play a critical role in setting the conditions under which resource development occurs on Indigenous land. Our understanding of what determines the outcomes of negotiations between Indigenous peoples and commercial interests is very limited. With over two decades experience ...
By Anne F. Boxberger Flaherty
October 10, 2017
American Indian nations are sovereign political entities within the United States. They have complex relationships with the federal government and increasingly with state governments. Regulatory conflict between Native nations and states has increased as Native nations have developed their own ...
By Katerina Prajznerova
August 08, 2016
First Published in 2003. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company....
By Amelia Kalant
May 17, 2016
Through readings of literature, canonical history texts, studies of museum displays and media analysis, this work explores the historical formation of myths of Canadian national identity and then how these myths were challenged (and affirmed during the 1990 standoff at Oka. It draws upon history, ...
By Blanca Schorcht
May 17, 2016
First published in 2004. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company....
By Pamela Martin
May 17, 2016
This dissertation argues that Amazonian indigenous peoples organized via transnational networks due to the domestic blockages presented to them in their respective countires. Due to these blockages and the growing number of transnational political opportunity structures, such as national and ...
By Seán Patrick Eudaily
August 18, 2015
This work applies Jacques Derrida's framework of "spectropolitics" to (post)coloniality in order to investigate the emergence of indigenous peoples' movements, advances a poststructural approach to the analysis of liberal politics based upon the historical sociology of Michel Foucault, and ...
By Matthew Herman
April 27, 2015
Over the last twenty years, Native American literary studies has taken a sharp political turn. In this book, Matthew Herman provides the historical framework for this shift and examines the key moments in the movement away from cultural analyses toward more politically inflected and motivated ...
By Christina M. Hebebrand
August 15, 2014
This book studies Native American and Chicano/a writers of the American Southwest as a coherent cultural group with common features and distinct efforts to deal with and to resist the dominant Euro-American culture....
By Rudolph C. Ryser
December 05, 2013
Indigenous peoples throughout the world tenaciously defend their lands, cultures, and their lives with resilience and determination. They have done so generation after generation. These are peoples who make up bedrock nations throughout the world in whose territories the United Nations says 80 ...