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E-grāmata: Indigenous Reconciliation and Decolonization: Narratives of Social Justice and Community Engagement

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This book addresses the ethical and practical issues at stake in the reconciliation of Indigenous and non-indigenous communities.

An increasing number of researchers, educators, and social and environmental activists are eager to find ways to effectively support ongoing attempts to recognize, integrate and promote Indigenous perspectives and communities. Taking Canada as its focus, this book offers a multidisciplinary consideration of a range of reconciliation policies, practices and initiatives that are relevant in all settler states. Set against its increasing neoliberal appropriation, the book resituates reconciliation in the everyday contexts of community interaction and engagement, as well as in the important areas of Indigenous knowledge, resource management and social and environmental justice. Reconciliation is not just the responsibility of law and government. And, attuned to the different perspectives of settlers, migrants and refugee communities, the book examines areas of opportunity, as well as obstacles to progress, in the forging of a truly decolonizing framework for reconciliation.

As the challenges of reconciliation cross numerous academic and substantial areas, this book will appeal to a range of scholars and practitioners working in law, politics, education, environmental studies, anthropology and Indigenous studies.
1. Introduction Ranjan Datta. Part One: Meanings of Reconciliation.
2.
Reconciliation as Decolonizing Ceremony Ranjan Datta.
3. Turtle Island to
Babylon Ahmad Majid.
4. This Reconciliation is for the Colonizer Andrea
Landry.
5. Language and Reconciliation: An Indigenous Womans Perspective
Edie Venne.
6. The Trapline: A Pathway of Indigenous Land-based
Reconciliation Colleen Charles. Part Two: Responsibilities for Land and
Reconciliation.
7. Reconciliation through Kits and Tests? Reconsidering
Newcomer Responsibilities on Indigenous Land Nisha Toomey, Yi Chien Jade Ho,
Deanna Del Vecchio with Eve Tuck.
8. Theorizing Land, Responsibility and
Reconciliation through Black Women standpoint Njoki Wane and Hermia Anthony.
9. Reconciliation as Rationalization of State Violence: Activist Performance
as Resistance to TRC politics in Chile and Canada Manuela Valle-Castro.
10.
Embracing reconciliation in the face of adversity: An intersectional
perspective on land, immigration, and anti-racist learning Jada Renee Koushik
and Naomi Mumbi Maina-Okori.
11. Indigenous and Newcomer Women in Journeys of
Reconciliation: Building Relationships and Learning from One Another Judy
White.
12. Building Bridges among Indigenous and Immigrant Communities: A
Visible Minority Immigrant Womans Journey Jebunnessa Chapola.
13. Humanizing
Community-engaged Participatory Research through Relational Practice Carolyn
M. Gaspar and Clifford T. Ballantyne.
14. Reflecting on the Privilege of the
Canadian Treaties Margot A. Hurlbert. Part Three: How to Move Forward.
15.
Conclusion: Reconciliation as Taking Responsibilities.
Ranjan Datta is Canada Research Chair-II at the Department of Humanities at Mount Royal University, Calgary, Canada.