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Negotiating the political economy of...
~
Manuta, Jessie Bacamante.
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Negotiating the political economy of dispossession and commodification: Reclaiming and regenerating the ancestral domains of the Lumad of Mindanao, southern Philippines.
Record Type:
Language materials, printed : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
Negotiating the political economy of dispossession and commodification: Reclaiming and regenerating the ancestral domains of the Lumad of Mindanao, southern Philippines./
Author:
Manuta, Jessie Bacamante.
Description:
232 p.
Notes:
Professor in charge: John Byrne.
Contained By:
Dissertation Abstracts International61-12A.
Subject:
Sociology, Ethnic and Racial Studies. -
Online resource:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=9998759
ISBN:
0493066802
Negotiating the political economy of dispossession and commodification: Reclaiming and regenerating the ancestral domains of the Lumad of Mindanao, southern Philippines.
Manuta, Jessie Bacamante.
Negotiating the political economy of dispossession and commodification: Reclaiming and regenerating the ancestral domains of the Lumad of Mindanao, southern Philippines.
- 232 p.
Professor in charge: John Byrne.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Delaware, 2001.
The globalization of technology and markets has caused powerful and painful changes in the lives of indigenous peoples worldwide. The encroachment of these modernizing forces threatens the survival of indigenous cultures around the world. Yet, recent actions by indigenous peoples show that in the face of colonization and threats of extinction and decimation, their struggle can bring forward an ‘indigenous consciousness’ and facilitate the reconstitution of just, nourishing and sustainable social and ecological relations.
ISBN: 0493066802Subjects--Topical Terms:
1017474
Sociology, Ethnic and Racial Studies.
Negotiating the political economy of dispossession and commodification: Reclaiming and regenerating the ancestral domains of the Lumad of Mindanao, southern Philippines.
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Manuta, Jessie Bacamante.
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Negotiating the political economy of dispossession and commodification: Reclaiming and regenerating the ancestral domains of the Lumad of Mindanao, southern Philippines.
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232 p.
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Professor in charge: John Byrne.
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Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 61-12, Section: A, page: 4970.
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Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Delaware, 2001.
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The globalization of technology and markets has caused powerful and painful changes in the lives of indigenous peoples worldwide. The encroachment of these modernizing forces threatens the survival of indigenous cultures around the world. Yet, recent actions by indigenous peoples show that in the face of colonization and threats of extinction and decimation, their struggle can bring forward an ‘indigenous consciousness’ and facilitate the reconstitution of just, nourishing and sustainable social and ecological relations.
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Espousing a dialectical possibility of transformation in social reality through the interplay of ideas, culture and material conflict, this dissertation looks at indigenous initiatives in negotiating the encroachment of colonizing and modernizing forces. This dissertation investigates the dialectical interaction of colonization of indigenous lands and spaces on one hand and the politics of the indigenous—the politics of the periphery—on the other hand.
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A case study of the initiatives of the Subanen—one of the indigenous groups of Mindanao, Southern Philippines—is pursued. Secondary data regarding the initiatives of the Chipko movement in Northern India, the Ecuadorian indigenous movement, and the Mi'Kmaq nation's struggle in Canada are explored to shed further light on indigenous initiatives.
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The research indicates that the initiatives to reclaim, rehabilitate and regenerate ancestral domains of the indigenous around the world are crucial in re-establishing the integrity of cultural domains and material life-sources of the indigenous. Reconstituting the integrity of their domains empowers the indigenous to create a just, nourishing and sustainable world.
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The dialectical challenge enunciated in this dissertation informs us that indigenous journeys toward a just, nourishing and sustainable world are arduous and problematic. Solidarity among the indigenous and non-indigenous alike remains an important platform as each group undertakes the rebuilding process in the face of globalization forces that, ultimately, threaten the social and environmental integrity of all communities.
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School code: 0060.
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http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=9998759
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