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Finley, Chris – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2011
In this article, the author aims to "discover" the actual Sacajawea. She intends to produce work that critiques colonialism in history and museums and to return the focus of the colonial gaze back to the colonizer. In this article, she talks about how colonial narratives of Sacajawea in popular culture justify conquest, heteropatriarchy, and the…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Popular Culture, Death, Museums
Stote, Karen – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2012
This paper considers the coercive sterilization of Aboriginal women in legislated and non-legislated form in Canada. I provide an historical and materialist critique of coercive sterilization. I argue for coercive sterilization to be understood as one of many policies employed to undermine Aboriginal women, to separate Aboriginal peoples from…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Females, Contraception
Iseke, Judy; Moore, Sylvia – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2011
Indigenous digital storytelling and research are as much about the process of community relationships as they are about the development of digital products and research outcomes. Indigenous researchers, digital storytelling producers, and academics work in different communities with research collaborators who are indigenous community members,…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Story Telling, Indigenous Populations, Oral Tradition
Nelson, Melissa K. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2011
In the author's presentation at the gathering and celebration of forty years of the American Indian Studies Center, she focused on emerging, positive trends and developments in Native American/American Indian/indigenous studies (NAS) and on areas to move toward as educators expand the field in order to make it more current and relevant to the…
Descriptors: American Indian Studies, American Indians, Nonprofit Organizations, Futures (of Society)
Hodge, Felicia Schanche; Maliski, Sally; Cadogan, Mary; Itty, Tracy L.; Cardoza, Briana – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2010
Communication patterns and explanatory processes are culturally specific and not often compatible with research data-gathering approaches. Particularly in areas of medical research and health and health-care behavioral research, indigenous educators and researchers note their frustration when Western paradigms, academic traditions, and medical…
Descriptors: American Indians, Researchers, Story Telling, Tales
Nielsen, Marianne O.; Brown, Samantha – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2012
The data from a longitudinal study of seven indigenous justice service organizations in four colonized countries were analyzed to identify the characteristics that made them "indigenous." Although nine common organizational characteristics emerged, of these, four are essential and specific to indigenous organizations (dependency on…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Definitions, Institutional Characteristics
Knopf, Kerstin – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2010
The mass media are an essential constituent in the construction of a nation's and an individual's self-image. Whether people like and know it or not, from early childhood on people are surrounded by media images and messages that to a great extent shape their perception and understanding of the world as well as contribute to their identity…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Programming (Broadcast), Foreign Countries, Radio
Wilkes, Rima; Corrigall-Brown, Catherine; Ricard, Danielle – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2010
Over the past several decades indigenous people in Canada have mounted hundreds of collective action events such as marches, demonstrations, road blockades, and land occupations. What the general public knows about these events and their causes overwhelmingly comes from the mainstream mass media. For this reason, media coverage of these events…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Nationalism, Ideology, Citizenship
Nicholas, Sheilah E. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2010
Daniel Nettle and Suzanne Romaine in "Vanishing Voices: The Extinction of the World's Languages" state that indigenous peoples represent about 4 percent of the world's population but speak at least 60 percent of the world's languages. They point out the reality of an ominous linguistic crisis of global proportions--languages die and continue to…
Descriptors: Language Maintenance, Self Concept, Indigenous Populations, Language Skill Attrition
De Montigny, Stephanie May – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2008
Ethnologists in the early twentieth century were the first to publish photographs of the Alabama-Coushatta people of Texas and the Coushatta (often written as "Koasati") of Louisiana. Since then, authors have shaped the photographic and textual representations according to their own notions of culture and identity. In this case, Mark…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, American Indians, Photography, Ethnology
Wiedman, Dennis – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2010
Indigenous scholars such as Seminole/Shawnee historian, Donald Fixico, drew attention to the lack of academic literature about the proactive, planned, and strategic actions of indigenous peoples. Most histories portray indigenous peoples as responding, accommodating, and assimilating to non-Indians and the US government. This article highlights…
Descriptors: Economic Development, Indigenous Populations, Tourism, Cultural Education
Johansen, Bruce E. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2012
For the state of Washington's one-hundredth birthday, in 1989, Native peoples there decided to revive a distinctive mode of transportation--long-distance journeys by canoe--along with an entire culture associated with it. Born as the "Paddle to Seattle," during the past two decades these canoe journeys have become a summertime staple for…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Transportation, Water, Recreational Activities
Pearce, Margaret Wickens; Louis, Renee Pualani – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2008
Indigenous communities have successfully used Western geospatial technologies (GT) (for example, digital maps, satellite images, geographic information systems (GIS), and global positioning systems (GPS)) since the 1970s to protect tribal resources, document territorial sovereignty, create tribal utility databases, and manage watersheds. The use…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, Tribal Sovereignty, Geographic Information Systems
Johnson, Jay T. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2008
In this article, the author seeks a middle path through which to traverse the "tricky ground" of Indigenous research; a middle path that will hopefully find "in-between spaces" open to new epistemological pathways, through which new voices and ideas can be heard within the social sciences and, in particular, within geography.…
Descriptors: Geography, Foreign Countries, Indigenous Knowledge, Indigenous Populations
Van Bussel, Gerard W. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2007
In this article, the author addresses historical representational strategies in his "inside" look at how Native culture and people were viewed from the perspective of Europeans. He presents an interesting study of a series of late-nineteenth-century sculptures at the Natural History Museum in Vienna that represents Indians from…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Museums, Foreign Countries, American Indian Culture