Indigenous Self-Government Negotiations in the Northwest Territorries (NWT), Canada: Time, Reality and Social Suffering

During the past 30 years, Canada has attempted to reconcile Aboriginal rights and title with Canadian sovereignty; including rights of political self determination, or "self government". I examine this process critically in this dissertation, exploring how temporal characterizations of Ind...

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Main Author: Irlbacher-Fox, Stephanie
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.17863/cam.27507
https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/280141
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spelling ftdatacite:10.17863/cam.27507 2023-05-15T16:00:33+02:00 Indigenous Self-Government Negotiations in the Northwest Territorries (NWT), Canada: Time, Reality and Social Suffering Irlbacher-Fox, Stephanie 2005 https://dx.doi.org/10.17863/cam.27507 https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/280141 unknown Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository All Rights Reserved https://www.rioxx.net/licenses/all-rights-reserved/ Text Thesis article-journal ScholarlyArticle 2005 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.17863/cam.27507 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z During the past 30 years, Canada has attempted to reconcile Aboriginal rights and title with Canadian sovereignty; including rights of political self determination, or "self government". I examine this process critically in this dissertation, exploring how temporal characterizations of Indigenous peoples, and injustices they suffer, are used by Canadian state representatives to restrict Canada's approaches to resolving injustice. This temporally based approach underpins a broader federal policy orientation rendering meaningless Indigenous peoples' experiences of social suffering arising from injustice. Emptying suffering of meaning is accomplished practically through 'Aboriginal policies' in which symptoms of suffering are defined as "dysfunction". The thrust of broad based 'Aboriginal policy' locates "dysfunction" as arising from actions internal to Indigenous peoples, rather than suffering arising from injustices perpetuated through Canada's social, political, and economic order. The dissertation begins with a description of legal and political foundations of self government negotiations in the NWT. This is followed by an interrogation of concepts of temporality used discursively by Indigenous and non-Indigenous scholars, leading to a critique of temporally based philosophical arguments regarding "historic injustice". These arguments are shown to be correlates with arguments asserted in government policies shaping negotiations. Through three examples drawn from three different self government negotiations, I examine how temporal characterizations solidify the disconnection between 'Aboriginal policy' orientations and the conditions creating ongoing social suffering within Indigenous communities. Throughout, descriptions of moose hide tanning function as ethnographic detail and an analytical tool drawn from Dene culture. This introduces the reader to a unique cultural referent for thinking about self government through Indigenous values and practices. It also functions as a tool through which Indigenous peoples, injustice, and 'Aboriginal policy' are situated as coeval, exposing the contradictions inherent in a government policy orientation premised on their temporal separation. : Digitisation of this thesis was sponsored by Arcadia Fund, a charitable fund of Lisbet Rausing and Peter Baldwin. Thesis Dene culture DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Baldwin ENVELOPE(163.300,163.300,-72.250,-72.250) Canada
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description During the past 30 years, Canada has attempted to reconcile Aboriginal rights and title with Canadian sovereignty; including rights of political self determination, or "self government". I examine this process critically in this dissertation, exploring how temporal characterizations of Indigenous peoples, and injustices they suffer, are used by Canadian state representatives to restrict Canada's approaches to resolving injustice. This temporally based approach underpins a broader federal policy orientation rendering meaningless Indigenous peoples' experiences of social suffering arising from injustice. Emptying suffering of meaning is accomplished practically through 'Aboriginal policies' in which symptoms of suffering are defined as "dysfunction". The thrust of broad based 'Aboriginal policy' locates "dysfunction" as arising from actions internal to Indigenous peoples, rather than suffering arising from injustices perpetuated through Canada's social, political, and economic order. The dissertation begins with a description of legal and political foundations of self government negotiations in the NWT. This is followed by an interrogation of concepts of temporality used discursively by Indigenous and non-Indigenous scholars, leading to a critique of temporally based philosophical arguments regarding "historic injustice". These arguments are shown to be correlates with arguments asserted in government policies shaping negotiations. Through three examples drawn from three different self government negotiations, I examine how temporal characterizations solidify the disconnection between 'Aboriginal policy' orientations and the conditions creating ongoing social suffering within Indigenous communities. Throughout, descriptions of moose hide tanning function as ethnographic detail and an analytical tool drawn from Dene culture. This introduces the reader to a unique cultural referent for thinking about self government through Indigenous values and practices. It also functions as a tool through which Indigenous peoples, injustice, and 'Aboriginal policy' are situated as coeval, exposing the contradictions inherent in a government policy orientation premised on their temporal separation. : Digitisation of this thesis was sponsored by Arcadia Fund, a charitable fund of Lisbet Rausing and Peter Baldwin.
format Thesis
author Irlbacher-Fox, Stephanie
spellingShingle Irlbacher-Fox, Stephanie
Indigenous Self-Government Negotiations in the Northwest Territorries (NWT), Canada: Time, Reality and Social Suffering
author_facet Irlbacher-Fox, Stephanie
author_sort Irlbacher-Fox, Stephanie
title Indigenous Self-Government Negotiations in the Northwest Territorries (NWT), Canada: Time, Reality and Social Suffering
title_short Indigenous Self-Government Negotiations in the Northwest Territorries (NWT), Canada: Time, Reality and Social Suffering
title_full Indigenous Self-Government Negotiations in the Northwest Territorries (NWT), Canada: Time, Reality and Social Suffering
title_fullStr Indigenous Self-Government Negotiations in the Northwest Territorries (NWT), Canada: Time, Reality and Social Suffering
title_full_unstemmed Indigenous Self-Government Negotiations in the Northwest Territorries (NWT), Canada: Time, Reality and Social Suffering
title_sort indigenous self-government negotiations in the northwest territorries (nwt), canada: time, reality and social suffering
publisher Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
publishDate 2005
url https://dx.doi.org/10.17863/cam.27507
https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/280141
long_lat ENVELOPE(163.300,163.300,-72.250,-72.250)
geographic Baldwin
Canada
geographic_facet Baldwin
Canada
genre Dene culture
genre_facet Dene culture
op_rights All Rights Reserved
https://www.rioxx.net/licenses/all-rights-reserved/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.17863/cam.27507
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