Indigenous Invisibility in the City contextualises the significant social change in Indigenous life circumstances and resurgence that came out of social movements in cities. It is about Indigenous resurgence and community development by First Nations people for First Nations people in cities.
Indigenous Invisibility in the City contextualises the significant social change in Indigenous life circumstances and resurgence that came out of social movements in cities. It is about Indigenous resurgence and community development by First Nations people for First Nations people in cities.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Deirdre Howard-Wagner is a sociologist and associate professor with the Australian National University. Her expertise is in Indigenous policy. Her co-edited books include The Neoliberal State, Recognition and Indigenous Rights (2018), Indigenous Justice (2018), and Unveiling Whiteness in the Twenty-First Century (2015).
Inhaltsangabe
1. Introduction: Making the Invisible Visible: The City as a Critical Space of Indigenous Resurgence and Community Development 2. Settler-colonial Cities as Sites of Indigenous Relocation: From Removal to Relocation 3. Indigenous Resurgence in Settler-colonial Cities: From Social Movements to Organisation Building 4. Indigenous Social Economies Hidden in Plain Sight: Organisations, Community Entrepreneuring, Development 5. A 'Renewed Right to Urban Life': Reconciliation and Indigenous Political Agency 6. White Spaces and White Adaptive Strategies: Visibility and Aesthetic Upgrades and Indigenous Place and Space in the Post-industrial City in the Neoliberal Age 7. Neoliberal Poverty Governance and the Consequent Effects for Indigenous Community Development in the City 8. Conclusion: The Wilful Inattentiveness to Racial Inequality in Cities: What Black Lives Matter Protests Reveal about Indigenous Invisibility
1. Introduction: Making the Invisible Visible: The City as a Critical Space of Indigenous Resurgence and Community Development
2. Settler-colonial Cities as Sites of Indigenous Relocation: From Removal to Relocation
3. Indigenous Resurgence in Settler-colonial Cities: From Social Movements to Organisation Building
4. Indigenous Social Economies Hidden in Plain Sight: Organisations, Community Entrepreneuring, Development
5. A 'Renewed Right to Urban Life': Reconciliation and Indigenous Political Agency
6. White Spaces and White Adaptive Strategies: Visibility and Aesthetic Upgrades and Indigenous Place and Space in the Post-industrial City in the Neoliberal Age
7. Neoliberal Poverty Governance and the Consequent Effects for Indigenous Community Development in the City
8. Conclusion: The Wilful Inattentiveness to Racial Inequality in Cities: What Black Lives Matter Protests Reveal about Indigenous Invisibility
1. Introduction: Making the Invisible Visible: The City as a Critical Space of Indigenous Resurgence and Community Development 2. Settler-colonial Cities as Sites of Indigenous Relocation: From Removal to Relocation 3. Indigenous Resurgence in Settler-colonial Cities: From Social Movements to Organisation Building 4. Indigenous Social Economies Hidden in Plain Sight: Organisations, Community Entrepreneuring, Development 5. A 'Renewed Right to Urban Life': Reconciliation and Indigenous Political Agency 6. White Spaces and White Adaptive Strategies: Visibility and Aesthetic Upgrades and Indigenous Place and Space in the Post-industrial City in the Neoliberal Age 7. Neoliberal Poverty Governance and the Consequent Effects for Indigenous Community Development in the City 8. Conclusion: The Wilful Inattentiveness to Racial Inequality in Cities: What Black Lives Matter Protests Reveal about Indigenous Invisibility
1. Introduction: Making the Invisible Visible: The City as a Critical Space of Indigenous Resurgence and Community Development
2. Settler-colonial Cities as Sites of Indigenous Relocation: From Removal to Relocation
3. Indigenous Resurgence in Settler-colonial Cities: From Social Movements to Organisation Building
4. Indigenous Social Economies Hidden in Plain Sight: Organisations, Community Entrepreneuring, Development
5. A 'Renewed Right to Urban Life': Reconciliation and Indigenous Political Agency
6. White Spaces and White Adaptive Strategies: Visibility and Aesthetic Upgrades and Indigenous Place and Space in the Post-industrial City in the Neoliberal Age
7. Neoliberal Poverty Governance and the Consequent Effects for Indigenous Community Development in the City
8. Conclusion: The Wilful Inattentiveness to Racial Inequality in Cities: What Black Lives Matter Protests Reveal about Indigenous Invisibility
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