Indigenous Identities and Nation-Building within Canadian Urban Centres: Relevance for Algonquin Nationhood
Metadata
Show full item recordAuthor
Decontie, Jeffrey
Date
2013-06-03Citation
Decontie, Jeffrey. Indigenous Identities and Nation-Building within Canadian Urban Centres: Relevance for Algonquin Nationhood; A thesis submitted to the Faculty of Graduate Studies in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Master of Indigenous Governance, Department of Indigenous Studies, University of Winnipeg. Winnipeg, May 2013.
Abstract
I document and analyze, using a decolonization framework, historical and contemporary understandings of Indigenous identities, focusing primarily on Indigenous Canadian identity in urban centres. I describe the reconstruction of Indigenous identities in urban centres through the maintenance of certain connections to specific places, traditions, and narratives. I deconstruct and compare western and Indigenous understandings of nation and nationalism. I analyze fears of nationalism while concluding that, while diverse Indigenous nations are growing in urban centres, Indigenous nations have more to fear from the Canadian nation-building project than the reverse. Rebuilding Indigenous nationhoods is a form of justice and equality because it develops the opportunity for nations to determine their own futures. I then apply my analysis to the Algonquin Nation in the Ottawa River watershed. My research addresses a significant gap in the body of knowledge by focusing on Indigenous nation-building in urban centres in Canada.
Collections
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
At Home in Winnipeg: Localizing Housing First as a Culturally Responsive Approach to Understanding and Addressing Urban Indigenous Homelessness
Distasio, Jino; Zell, Sarah; Snyder, Marcie (Institute of Urban Studies, 2018-08) -
The Significance of a Relations-based Approach to Indigenous Research Ethics and Indigenous Data Sovereignty
Ten Fingers, Keely (University of WinnipegUniversity of Winnipeg, 2020-12-08)BACKGROUND: Indigenous people have been increasingly asserting self-determination in research to “research ourselves back to life”. There is a current knowledge gap regarding how gender is considered in Indigenous research ... -
Unheard Voices: Healing Stories of Reclamation and Rebuilding for Families of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women, Girls, and Two-Spirit people who have not been involved in the National Inquiry
Wolfe, Tammy (University of WinnipegUniversity of Winnipeg, 2021)This work uncovers the stories of relatives who have been impacted by the crisis of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women, Girls, and Two-Spirit people (MMIWG2S) in Canada, who have not been involved in the National Inquiry ...