Moral Foundations in the Aboriginal/British Crown 'Tradition': Virtue and The Covenant Chain

Whether a mutually recognized respectful relationship between North America's First Nations and the British Crown existed forms one concern of this paper. A second, assuming sufficient evidence to affirm the first, is to describe the ethical framework according to which this relationship was fo...

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Main Author: Morito, Bruce
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2149/2966
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spelling ftathabasuniv:oai:auspace.athabascau.ca:2149/2966 2023-11-05T03:41:59+01:00 Moral Foundations in the Aboriginal/British Crown 'Tradition': Virtue and The Covenant Chain Morito, Bruce 2011-03-29T15:21:09Z audio/x-mpeg application/java-archive http://hdl.handle.net/2149/2966 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/2149/2966 Presentation 2011 ftathabasuniv 2023-10-08T07:34:54Z Whether a mutually recognized respectful relationship between North America's First Nations and the British Crown existed forms one concern of this paper. A second, assuming sufficient evidence to affirm the first, is to describe the ethical framework according to which this relationship was formed. By appealing to 17th and 18th century records of agencies responsible for Indian affairs, the paper attempts to sketch the moral norms influencing the relationship, to the extent that such information can be gleaned from these records. It concludes that there were important, if not critical, ethical expectations exercised through wampum and other protocols in what was known as the Covenant Chain. The interdisciplinary analysis to ferret out these norms and concepts embedded in records of council meetings, descriptions of persons and other descriptions of how the English adapted to the practices of aboriginal people. Identifying the ethical elements is done partly through describing patterns of explicit use of ethical language and partly through what can be called a "presupposition analysis." The hope is to shed light on the conditions, in particular, that of the First Nation/British legal, political and economic tradition. Conference Object First Nations Athabasca University: AUSpace
institution Open Polar
collection Athabasca University: AUSpace
op_collection_id ftathabasuniv
language English
description Whether a mutually recognized respectful relationship between North America's First Nations and the British Crown existed forms one concern of this paper. A second, assuming sufficient evidence to affirm the first, is to describe the ethical framework according to which this relationship was formed. By appealing to 17th and 18th century records of agencies responsible for Indian affairs, the paper attempts to sketch the moral norms influencing the relationship, to the extent that such information can be gleaned from these records. It concludes that there were important, if not critical, ethical expectations exercised through wampum and other protocols in what was known as the Covenant Chain. The interdisciplinary analysis to ferret out these norms and concepts embedded in records of council meetings, descriptions of persons and other descriptions of how the English adapted to the practices of aboriginal people. Identifying the ethical elements is done partly through describing patterns of explicit use of ethical language and partly through what can be called a "presupposition analysis." The hope is to shed light on the conditions, in particular, that of the First Nation/British legal, political and economic tradition.
format Conference Object
author Morito, Bruce
spellingShingle Morito, Bruce
Moral Foundations in the Aboriginal/British Crown 'Tradition': Virtue and The Covenant Chain
author_facet Morito, Bruce
author_sort Morito, Bruce
title Moral Foundations in the Aboriginal/British Crown 'Tradition': Virtue and The Covenant Chain
title_short Moral Foundations in the Aboriginal/British Crown 'Tradition': Virtue and The Covenant Chain
title_full Moral Foundations in the Aboriginal/British Crown 'Tradition': Virtue and The Covenant Chain
title_fullStr Moral Foundations in the Aboriginal/British Crown 'Tradition': Virtue and The Covenant Chain
title_full_unstemmed Moral Foundations in the Aboriginal/British Crown 'Tradition': Virtue and The Covenant Chain
title_sort moral foundations in the aboriginal/british crown 'tradition': virtue and the covenant chain
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2149/2966
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/2149/2966
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