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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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Qualitative Inquiry, 2020
Both new materialist philosophy of science and Indigenous studies scholarship have developed theories about the agency of non-human things. There has, however, been relatively little articulation between these two literatures in the qualitative social ...
J. Rosiek, J. Snyder, S. Pratt
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Both new materialist philosophy of science and Indigenous studies scholarship have developed theories about the agency of non-human things. There has, however, been relatively little articulation between these two literatures in the qualitative social ...
J. Rosiek, J. Snyder, S. Pratt
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Decolonizing Methodologies: Research and Indigenous Peoples
, 2000Foreword Introduction 1. Imperialism, History, Writing and Theory 2. Research through Imperial Eyes 3. Colonizing Knowledges 4. Research Adventures on Indigenous Land 5. Notes from Down Under 6.
Linda T. Smith
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Indigenous data, indigenous methodologies and indigenous data sovereignty
International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2018The field of Indigenous methodologies has grown strongly since Tuhiwai Smith’s 1999 groundbreaking book Decolonizing Indigenous Methodologies. For the most part however, there has been a marked absence of quantitative methodologies with the methods aligned with Indigenous methodologies predominantly qualitative.
Maggie Walter, Michele Suina
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, 2016
In this article, I ask how anthropology can adopt a decolonial approach that incorporates and acknowledges the critical scholarship of Indigenous thinkers whose work and labour informs many current trends in Euro-Western scholarship, activism and socio ...
Zoe Todd
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In this article, I ask how anthropology can adopt a decolonial approach that incorporates and acknowledges the critical scholarship of Indigenous thinkers whose work and labour informs many current trends in Euro-Western scholarship, activism and socio ...
Zoe Todd
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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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The White Possessive: Property, Power, and Indigenous Sovereignty
, 2015The White Possessive explores the links between race, sovereignty, and possession through themes of property: owning property, being property, and becoming propertyless.
Aileen Moreton-Robinson
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ACM SIGGRAPH 2018 Art Gallery, 2018
We started reading science fiction as teenagers. We fell in love with the fantastic worlds, the strange societies, the alien cultures and the amazing technologies. As we got older, though, we began to notice the lack of Native people in those futures. In fact, there were barely any nonwhite people at all.
Jason Edward Lewis, Skawennati
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We started reading science fiction as teenagers. We fell in love with the fantastic worlds, the strange societies, the alien cultures and the amazing technologies. As we got older, though, we began to notice the lack of Native people in those futures. In fact, there were barely any nonwhite people at all.
Jason Edward Lewis, Skawennati
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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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