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This book testifies to Indigenous peoples as agents of governance innovation and successful developers in their own right, and telling stories in their words, from their own experiences and countries.
Table des matières
Foreword / Jason Glanville
Introduction. Indigenous Governance, Indigenous Development: Rebuilding Pathways for Future Possibilities / Diane Smith
THEME 1: GOVERNING RIGHTS AND INTERESTS
Thematic Introduction: Concepts, Issues and Trends / Diane Smith
1. The UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples: How Far We've Come and the Road Ahead / S. James Anaya
2.Indigenous Governance and Native Title in Australia / Ivan Ingram
3.Reconciling Interests and Rights within M¿ori Institutions of Governing in Wellington, New Zealand / Annie Te One
4.Identifying a Legal Framework for a Treaty Between Australia's First People and the State / Asmi Wood and Christie Gardiner
5. The United Houma Nation: Whose Governance? By whom? For Whom? / Adam Crepelle
THEME 2: GOVERNING FOR NATION BUILDING
Thematic Introduction Concepts, Issues and Trends / Diane Smith
6. Treating Treaty as a Technology for Indigenous Nation Building / Daryle Rigney, Simone Bignall, Alison Vivian, Steve Hemming, Shaun Berg and Damein Bell
7. Ancient Spirit, Modern Mind: The Huu-ay-aht Journey Back to Self-Determination and Self-Reliance / Angela Wesley
8. Culturally Centred, Community Led: Wiradjuri Nation Rebuilding through Honouring the Wiradjuri Way / Donna Murray and Debra Evans
9. Nation Rebuilders: An Indigenous Self-Governance Strategy / Joan Timeche
10. Can a Self-Determination Strategy Improve Indigenous Health Care? Evidence from the United States / Stephen Cornell, Miriam Jorgensen and Stephanie Russo Carroll
THEME 3: GOVERNING DEVELOPMENT AND RESOURCES
Thematic Introduction: Concepts, Issues and Trends / Diane Smith
11. Rebuilding the Yawuru Nation: Activating cultural assets for economic growth and stability / Peter Yu
12. The Red Lake Walleye Recovery Project: Tribal Governance for Sustainable Success / Miriam Jorgensen, Allen Pemberton, Pat Brown, and David Conner
13. Making First Nation Law: The Listuguj Mi'gmaq Fishery / National Centre for First Nations Governance and the Native Nations Institute
14. Instilling Good Governance for Community Prosperity: The Canadian Experience / Jamie Sterritt
15. M¿ori Nation-building through Social Enterprise in M¿ori Communities / Sacha McMeeking
THEME 4: GOVERNING AS TRANSFORMATIVE LEADERSHIP
Thematic Introduction: Concepts, Issues and Trends / Diane Smith
16.Healing, Decolonisation and Governance / Bhiamie Williamson
17.'You're not just a leader, you are an Indigenous leader': Empowering Native American Women for Governing / Karen Diver
18. Mana W¿hine: We care so much it exhausts us! / Mera Penehira
19. The Trials and Legacy of Delgamuukw: Transforming Rights into Outcomes for Canadian First Nations Peoples / Neil J. Sterritt
A propos de l'auteur
Diane Smith is an anthropologist, Senior Research Fellow, (Delegated) Associate Dean (Education/Research) and Higher Degree Research (HDR) Program Manager at the National Centre for Indigenous Studies at the ANU. Diane gained her PhD (Anthropology, Indigenous Governance) from the Centre for Aboriginal Economic Policy Research at The Australian National University. She was a Chief Investigator for the groundbreaking Australian ‘Indigenous Community Governance Research Project’ (2002-2008), and has been a mediation member of the National Native Title Tribunal. She is a Board Director of the Australian Indigenous Governance Institute and wrote the content for the comprehensive AIGI online Indigenous Governance Toolkit. Diane was a co-editor of the influential Australian volume Contested Governance: Culture, power and institutions in Indigenous Australia, co-edited by Janet Hunt, Diane Smith, Stephanie Garling and Will Sanders, CAEPR, ANU EPress (2008). Diane has published extensively over forty years on topics Indigenous governance, development, welfare, resource agreements, native title and land rights, women’s scared sites and knowledge, Indigenous Studies and research methodologies, Indigenous Affairs policy and governmentality.