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Engaging (with) Indigeneity: Decolonization and Indigenous/Indigenizing Sport History
Journal of Sport History, 2019AbstractThe drive to decolonize the academy has led to the reconstruction of old understandings, yet much of the critical studies tradition does little more than add “data” from colonially suppressed peoples without re-examining the dominant discursive narratives.
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Deciphering the “Indigenous” in Indigenous Methodologies
AlterNative: An International Journal of Indigenous Peoples, 2012Motivated by the author's experience in an Indigenous Studies doctoral programme, this article examines what is inherent within the meaning of Indigenous in the term Indigenous methodologies. Through this examination it becomes evident that Traditional knowledges are not interchangeable with Indigenous within the term.
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Indigenous Novels, Indigenized Worlds
2023The fictional worlds created by many contemporary American and Canadian Indigenous novelists for young people provide unique access to the lived experiences of Indigenous people, past, present, and future and the often inaccessible worlds they inhabit.
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Indigenous Peoples and Indigeneity
2016Tawhai provides a thorough and much needed examination of the notions of Indigenous peoples and indigeneity as expressed through international instruments such as the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. The chapter critically explores the tensions these notions cause for considerations of citizenship and social justice ...
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Mediating Indigeneity, Indigenizing Media
Parallax, 2014Brendan Hokowhitu and Vijay Devadas's latest instalment in the University of Minnesota Press's Indigenous Americas series is a welcome intervention in a still nascent field: Indigenous Media Studie...
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2020
To write of digital indigeneity or digital Natives is to confront the fact that, as Anishinaabe/Métis games designer Elizabeth LaPensée described in a cryptic but resonant tweet: “The Internet has been colonized” (2017 n.pag.). Popularized in the title of Marc Prensky's influential 2001 paper on educational reform, the term “digital Native” is defined ...
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To write of digital indigeneity or digital Natives is to confront the fact that, as Anishinaabe/Métis games designer Elizabeth LaPensée described in a cryptic but resonant tweet: “The Internet has been colonized” (2017 n.pag.). Popularized in the title of Marc Prensky's influential 2001 paper on educational reform, the term “digital Native” is defined ...
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Too late for indigenous climate justice: Ecological and relational tipping points
WIREs Climate Change, 2019It may be too late to achieve environmental justice for some indigenous peoples, and other groups, in terms of avoiding dangerous climate change.
K. Whyte
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Indigenous Bioethics and Indigenous Rights
2021Issues related to the health of Indigenous peoples are deeply connected to the ongoing legacy of colonization and to complex issues about access to human rights. In this chapter we explore how the field of bioethics can contribute to solutions through a consideration of Indigenous perspectives on health and the ongoing effects of colonization.
Briskman, Linda +2 more
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Indigenous Communities and Indigenous Children
The International Journal of Children’s Rights, 2015A move away from the traditional child-parent-state model of children’s rights in favour of a four-party model which includes indigenous communities can be identified in international legal discourse. The basis for this phenomenon can be found in arguments for the preservation of indigenous culture. However, whether this argument is adequate for such a
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, 2020
A century ago, the idea of indigenous people as an active force in the contemporary world was unthinkable. It was assumed that native societies everywhere would be swept away by the forward march of the West and its own peculiar brand of progress and ...
Marisol de la Cadena, Orin Starn
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A century ago, the idea of indigenous people as an active force in the contemporary world was unthinkable. It was assumed that native societies everywhere would be swept away by the forward march of the West and its own peculiar brand of progress and ...
Marisol de la Cadena, Orin Starn
semanticscholar +1 more source

