First Nations' self-government, Indigenous self-determination: On the transformative role of agonistic Indigeneity in challenging the conceptual limits of sovereignty

This thesis explores the possibilities of decolonizing the Euro-American political traditions of sovereignty in an effort to re-craft the social contract between the Canadian state and Indigenous peoples. It argues that the Canadian state embodies a particularly narrow conception of sovereignty that...

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Main Author: Andrusieczko, Tanya
Other Authors: Garcea, Joe, Hibbert, Neil, Poelzer, Greg
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Saskatchewan 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10388/ETD-2012-04-402
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spelling ftusaskatchewan:oai:harvest.usask.ca:10388/ETD-2012-04-402 2023-05-15T16:16:02+02:00 First Nations' self-government, Indigenous self-determination: On the transformative role of agonistic Indigeneity in challenging the conceptual limits of sovereignty Andrusieczko, Tanya Garcea, Joe Hibbert, Neil Poelzer, Greg April 2012 http://hdl.handle.net/10388/ETD-2012-04-402 eng eng University of Saskatchewan http://hdl.handle.net/10388/ETD-2012-04-402 TC-SSU-201204402 First Nations Aboriginal self-government self-determination sovereignty Indigeneity agonism agonistic Indigeneity radical imagination text Thesis 2012 ftusaskatchewan 2022-01-17T11:53:38Z This thesis explores the possibilities of decolonizing the Euro-American political traditions of sovereignty in an effort to re-craft the social contract between the Canadian state and Indigenous peoples. It argues that the Canadian state embodies a particularly narrow conception of sovereignty that limits the possibility of actors representing claims to Aboriginal self-government to challenge the paramountcy of the state. Claims to Aboriginal self-government are truncated because most meaningful manifestations of self-government that challenges the principles of sovereignty are largely rejected by the Canadian state. There are models of Aboriginal self-government that are permissible, proving that the state is willing to negotiate to some extent and to stretch its understanding of sovereignty to accommodate Aboriginal rights, but important models recognizing Indigenous nationhood are squeezed out by the limited political imagination that positions the state in its hierarchical apex, to the exclusion of Indigenous self-determination. This thesis will first delineate how Canadian sovereignty is legitimized and established, and will proceed to argue that the models of Aboriginal self-government that are permissible are those that do not challenge the paramountcy of the state and therefore allow only for a constrained model of self-determination. Through a critical theoretical lens of Indigeneity, this thesis will examine the underlying assumptions that curtail the discourse on self-government. A new social discourse framework called agonistic Indigeneity will be presented as an avenue for challenging colonial state sovereignty and for asserting political imaginations that privilege Indigenous understandings of sovereignty. Thesis First Nations University of Saskatchewan: eCommons@USASK
institution Open Polar
collection University of Saskatchewan: eCommons@USASK
op_collection_id ftusaskatchewan
language English
topic First Nations
Aboriginal
self-government
self-determination
sovereignty
Indigeneity
agonism
agonistic Indigeneity
radical imagination
spellingShingle First Nations
Aboriginal
self-government
self-determination
sovereignty
Indigeneity
agonism
agonistic Indigeneity
radical imagination
Andrusieczko, Tanya
First Nations' self-government, Indigenous self-determination: On the transformative role of agonistic Indigeneity in challenging the conceptual limits of sovereignty
topic_facet First Nations
Aboriginal
self-government
self-determination
sovereignty
Indigeneity
agonism
agonistic Indigeneity
radical imagination
description This thesis explores the possibilities of decolonizing the Euro-American political traditions of sovereignty in an effort to re-craft the social contract between the Canadian state and Indigenous peoples. It argues that the Canadian state embodies a particularly narrow conception of sovereignty that limits the possibility of actors representing claims to Aboriginal self-government to challenge the paramountcy of the state. Claims to Aboriginal self-government are truncated because most meaningful manifestations of self-government that challenges the principles of sovereignty are largely rejected by the Canadian state. There are models of Aboriginal self-government that are permissible, proving that the state is willing to negotiate to some extent and to stretch its understanding of sovereignty to accommodate Aboriginal rights, but important models recognizing Indigenous nationhood are squeezed out by the limited political imagination that positions the state in its hierarchical apex, to the exclusion of Indigenous self-determination. This thesis will first delineate how Canadian sovereignty is legitimized and established, and will proceed to argue that the models of Aboriginal self-government that are permissible are those that do not challenge the paramountcy of the state and therefore allow only for a constrained model of self-determination. Through a critical theoretical lens of Indigeneity, this thesis will examine the underlying assumptions that curtail the discourse on self-government. A new social discourse framework called agonistic Indigeneity will be presented as an avenue for challenging colonial state sovereignty and for asserting political imaginations that privilege Indigenous understandings of sovereignty.
author2 Garcea, Joe
Hibbert, Neil
Poelzer, Greg
format Thesis
author Andrusieczko, Tanya
author_facet Andrusieczko, Tanya
author_sort Andrusieczko, Tanya
title First Nations' self-government, Indigenous self-determination: On the transformative role of agonistic Indigeneity in challenging the conceptual limits of sovereignty
title_short First Nations' self-government, Indigenous self-determination: On the transformative role of agonistic Indigeneity in challenging the conceptual limits of sovereignty
title_full First Nations' self-government, Indigenous self-determination: On the transformative role of agonistic Indigeneity in challenging the conceptual limits of sovereignty
title_fullStr First Nations' self-government, Indigenous self-determination: On the transformative role of agonistic Indigeneity in challenging the conceptual limits of sovereignty
title_full_unstemmed First Nations' self-government, Indigenous self-determination: On the transformative role of agonistic Indigeneity in challenging the conceptual limits of sovereignty
title_sort first nations' self-government, indigenous self-determination: on the transformative role of agonistic indigeneity in challenging the conceptual limits of sovereignty
publisher University of Saskatchewan
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10388/ETD-2012-04-402
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10388/ETD-2012-04-402
TC-SSU-201204402
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