The anathema of aggregation: Toward 21st-century self-government in the Coast Salish world
There are significant tensions in state-sponsored attempts to formulate aggregated First Nations self-government bodies. In spite of decades of pressure from the Indian Act and Canada's Inherent Self-Government Rights Policy, and a dramatic privatization and alienation of lands and resources, F...
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Format: | Article in Journal/Newspaper |
Language: | English |
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Anthropologica
2010
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Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/1828/15607 https://www.jstor.org/stable/29545993 |
Summary: | There are significant tensions in state-sponsored attempts to formulate aggregated First Nations self-government bodies. In spite of decades of pressure from the Indian Act and Canada's Inherent Self-Government Rights Policy, and a dramatic privatization and alienation of lands and resources, First Nations' visions of future self-governments continue to be distinctively local, with a few notable exceptions. This article looks at how the kin-based principles that underwrite Coast Salish leadership, property, political networking and the distribution of political power bases profoundly influence choices in self-determination. These issues challenge both state and First Nations negotiators to reconcile cultural difference in these agreements. Faculty Reviewed |
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