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Indigenous Self-Determination, Neoli...
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Tomiak, Julie-Ann.
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Indigenous Self-Determination, Neoliberalization, and the Right to the City: Rescaling Aboriginal Governance in Ottawa and Winnipeg.
紀錄類型:
書目-電子資源 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
Indigenous Self-Determination, Neoliberalization, and the Right to the City: Rescaling Aboriginal Governance in Ottawa and Winnipeg./
作者:
Tomiak, Julie-Ann.
面頁冊數:
321 p.
附註:
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 73-08(E), Section: A.
Contained By:
Dissertation Abstracts International73-08A(E).
標題:
Canadian studies. -
電子資源:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=NR83226
ISBN:
9780494832264
Indigenous Self-Determination, Neoliberalization, and the Right to the City: Rescaling Aboriginal Governance in Ottawa and Winnipeg.
Tomiak, Julie-Ann.
Indigenous Self-Determination, Neoliberalization, and the Right to the City: Rescaling Aboriginal Governance in Ottawa and Winnipeg.
- 321 p.
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 73-08(E), Section: A.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Carleton University (Canada), 2011.
The needs, rights, and aspirations of urban Indigenous peoples in Canada have been marginalized through colonial and neoliberal governmentality, legality, and discourses that continue to place Indigeneity in rural and remote areas. This dissertation examines shifting state strategies of displacement and containment and Indigenous resistance to the production of the settler city as a scalar void. More specifically, it investigates the transformations in urban Indigenous governance in Ottawa and Winnipeg in the 2000s, with a particular focus on the horizontally and vertically networked partnerships created under the federal Urban Aboriginal Strategy.
ISBN: 9780494832264Subjects--Topical Terms:
2122858
Canadian studies.
Indigenous Self-Determination, Neoliberalization, and the Right to the City: Rescaling Aboriginal Governance in Ottawa and Winnipeg.
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The needs, rights, and aspirations of urban Indigenous peoples in Canada have been marginalized through colonial and neoliberal governmentality, legality, and discourses that continue to place Indigeneity in rural and remote areas. This dissertation examines shifting state strategies of displacement and containment and Indigenous resistance to the production of the settler city as a scalar void. More specifically, it investigates the transformations in urban Indigenous governance in Ottawa and Winnipeg in the 2000s, with a particular focus on the horizontally and vertically networked partnerships created under the federal Urban Aboriginal Strategy.
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The objectives of my research are twofold: first, to problematize the settler city as a sociospatial technology of colonialism which operates through a range of interrelated strategies of erasure; and, second, to highlight Indigenous struggles for self-determination which include asserting the right to (be in) the city through community-building and nation-building and strategies of scale-jumping and scale-bending. Employing a critical spatial lens and a post-disciplinary methodology, I draw on key informant interviews to explore how various Indigenous and state actors have altered, reinforced, and contested colonial processes of meaning-making, territorialization, and marginalization in Ottawa and Winnipeg.
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Positioning cities at the centre of the spatial logic of coloniality in Canada and as crucial sites of decolonization, I illustrate how the right to the city for Indigenous peoples does not only entail political reconfigurations at the urban scale, but requires a fundamental rethinking of the place of cities and the place of Indigenous peoples in relation to competing scales, jurisdictions, and sovereignties. In this way, the dissertation seeks to address critical gaps in the research literature on urban Indigenous issues, particularly in the fields of Political Economy, Indigenous Studies, and Urban Studies. It is hoped that it will provide insights for justice-oriented political action.
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