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Upholding Indigenous economic relationships : Nehiyawak narratives  Cover Image E-book E-book

Upholding Indigenous economic relationships : Nehiyawak narratives

Summary: "Upholding Indigenous Economic Relationships explains settler colonialism through the lens of economic exploitation, using Indigenous methodologies and critical approaches. What is the relationship between economic progress in the land now called Canada and the exploitation of Indigenous peoples? And what gifts embedded within Indigenous world views speak to miyo-pimâtisiwin, the good life, and specifically to good economic relations? Shalene Wuttunee Jobin draws on the knowledge systems of the nehiyawak (Plains Cree people) - whose distinctive principles and practices shape their economic behaviour - to make two central arguments. The first is that economic exploitation was the initial and most enduring relationship between newcomers and Indigenous peoples. The second is that Indigenous economic relationships are constitutive: connections to the land, water, and other human and nonhuman beings form who we are as individuals and as peoples. This groundbreaking study employs Cree narratives that draw from the past and move into the present to reveal previously overlooked Indigenous economic theories and relationships, and provides contemporary examples of nehiyawak renewing these relationships in resurgent ways. In the process, Upholding Indigenous Economic Relationships offers tools that enable us to reimagine how we can aspire to the good life with all our relations."--

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780774865302
  • ISBN: 077486530X
  • ISBN: 9780774865258
  • ISBN: 0774865253
  • Physical Description: remote
    1 online resource
  • Publisher: Vancouver ; Toronto : UBC Press, [2023]

Content descriptions

Bibliography, etc. Note: Includes bibliographical references and index.
Source of Description Note:
Description based on online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on February 13, 2023).
Subject: Indigenous peoples -- Canada -- Economic conditions
Economics -- Canada -- Sociological aspects
Commerce -- Social aspects -- Canada
Exchange -- Social aspects -- Canada
Value -- Social aspects -- Canada
Indigenous peoples -- Canada -- Social conditions
Canada -- Race relations
Canada -- Ethnic relations
Commerce -- Social aspects
Economics -- Sociological aspects
Ethnic relations
Exchange -- Social aspects
Indigenous peoples -- Economic conditions
Indigenous peoples -- Social conditions
Race relations
Value -- Social aspects
Canada
Topic Heading: Learning with Syeyutsus speaker series 2024.
Learning with Syeyutsus speaker series.

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