Indigenous in the City: Contemporary Identities and Cultural Innovation

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Author(s): Evelyn Peters and Chris Andersen
Publisher: UBC Press
Year: 2013

Language: English
Pages: 414

Cover
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part 1: Aboriginal Urbanization in Canada
1 The Urbanization of Aboriginal
Populations in Canada
2 Urban Aboriginality as a Distinctive
Identity, in Twelve Parts
3 Breaching Reserve Boundaries
4 “I Basically Mostly Stick with My Own Kind”
5 Being Métis
6 Laying the Groundwork for Co-Production
7 Increasing the Depth of Our Civic Identity
Part 2: American Indian Urbanization in the United States
8 American Indians and Alaska Natives in Urban Environments
9 “Being Indian in the City”
10 Dancing into Place
Part 3: Aboriginal Urbanization in Australia
11 Indigenous Urbanization in Australia
12 Aboriginal Identity and Place
in the Intercultural Settings of
Metropolitan Australia
13 Aboriginal Youth, Work, and Aspiration in Sydney’s Redfern-Waterloo Region
Part 4: Māori Urbanization in New Zealand
14 The Structure of Urban Māori Identities
15 Māori and Environmental Justice
16 Producing Indigeneity
Conclusion
Contributors
Index