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✦   LIBER   ✦

πŸ“

Reclaiming Indigenous Planning

✍ Scribed by Ryan Walker; Ted Jojola; David Natcher


Publisher
McGill-Queen's University Press
Year
2013
Tongue
English
Leaves
525
Series
McGill-Queen's Indigenous and Northern Studies; 70
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


How Indigenous peoples are reclaiming community planning practices and ideologies.

How Indigenous peoples are reclaiming community planning practices and ideologies.

✦ Table of Contents


Cover
Contents
Tables and Figures
Foreword
Preface
1 Theorizing Indigenous Planning
PART ONE INDIGENOUS COMMUNITIES
2 Reconstituting Native Nations: Colonial Boundaries and Institutional Innovation in Canada, Australia, and the United States
3 The Past as Present: Film as a Community Planning Intervention in Native/Non-Native Relations in British Columbia, Canada
4 Culture and Economy: The Cruel Choice Revisited
5 Community-Based and Comprehensive: Reflections on Planning and Action in First Nations
6 Co-creative Planning: Simpcw First Nation and the Centre for Indigenous Environmental Resources
7 Maybe, Maybe Not: Native American Participation in Regional Planning
PART TWO THE URBAN EXPERIENCE
8 Aboriginality and Planning in Canada’s Large Prairie Cities
9 Laguna Pueblo Indians in Urban Labour Camps, 1922–80
10 Kaitiakitanga o Ngā Ngahere Pōhatu - Kaitiakitanga of Urban Settlements
11 Urban Aboriginal Planning: Towards a Transformative Statistical Praxis
12 Coexistence in Cities: The Challenge of Indigenous Urban Planning in the Twenty-First Century
PART THREE LANDS AND RESOURCES
13 Capacity Deficits at Cultural Interfaces of Land and Sea Governance
14 Iwi Futures: Integrating Traditional Knowledge Systems and Cultural Values into Land-Use Planning
15 The Power and Peril of β€œVulnerability”: Lending a Cautious Eye to Community Labels
16 Indigenous Source Water Protection: Lessons for Watershed Planning in Canada
17 Boundary-Riding: Indigenous Knowledge Contributions for Natural Resource Decision Making in Northern Australian Regions
18 Representing and Mapping Traditional Knowledge in Ontario Forest Management Planning
19 Our Beautiful Land: The Challenge of Nunatsiavut Land-Use Planning
PART FOUR CONCLUSION
20 Indigenous Planning: Towards a Seven Generations Model
Contributors
Index
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
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W
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