Produktbild: The Routledge Handbook of Indigenous Development

The Routledge Handbook of Indigenous Development

Fr. 89.90

inkl. gesetzl. MwSt., Versandkostenfrei


Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

13.03.2025

Abbildungen

schwarz-weiss Illustrationen, Raster, schwarz-weiss, Zeichnungen, schwarz-weiss, Tabellen, schwarz-weiss

Herausgeber

Katharina Ruckstuhl + weitere

Verlag

Taylor & Francis

Seitenzahl

538

Maße (L/B/H)

24.6/17.4/2.9 cm

Gewicht

980 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-367-72023-0

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

13.03.2025

Abbildungen

schwarz-weiss Illustrationen, Raster, schwarz-weiss, Zeichnungen, schwarz-weiss, Tabellen, schwarz-weiss

Herausgeber

Verlag

Taylor & Francis

Seitenzahl

538

Maße (L/B/H)

24.6/17.4/2.9 cm

Gewicht

980 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-367-72023-0

EU-Ansprechpartner

Taylor & Francis Verlag GmbH
Kaufingerstraße 24
80331 München
DE
GPSR@taylorandfrancis.com

Herstelleradresse

Taylor & Francis Group
5 Howick Place
SW1P 1WG London
UK
GPSR@taylorandfrancis.com

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  • Produktbild: The Routledge Handbook of Indigenous Development
  • Part I - Retheorizing Development  Chapter 1 - Indigenous Development as Flourishing Intergenerational Relationships  Chapter 2 - Violent Colonialism: The Doctrine of Discovery and its Historical Continuity  Chapter 3 - Capitalism and Development  Chapter 4 - Refusing Development and the Death of Indigenous Life  Chapter 5 - Two-Spirit Issues in Development  Chapter 6 - The struggles of Tseltal women and Caring for the Earth: reflections on sustaining life-existence in times of the pandemic  Chapter 7 - Towards a Plurinational State in Guatemala  Chapter 8 - Pluck the Stars from the Sky: The Pluriverse of Adivasi Health in India  Part II - Law, Self-Governance, and Security  Chapter 9 - The Inca and Indigenous Development: Recalling A Native American Empire in South America  Chapter 10 - Indians and the State: Negotiating Progress, Modernity, and Development in Bolivia  Chapter 11 - The Constituent Process in Chile (2019-2022) from the Perspective of Indigenous Peoples  Chapter 12 - Negotiating Legal Pluralism and Indigenous Development: Lessons From Bolivia  Chapter 13 - Sámi Political Shifts - from assimilation, via invisibility to indigenization?  Chapter 14 - Reflections on a career in Indigenous Intellectual Property Nga Taonga Tuku Iho  Chapter 15 - Maya K'iche' community responses to gender violence in Santa Cruz del Quiché, Guatemala  Chapter 16 - Reconceptualizing Gendered Violence: Indigenous Women's Life Projects and Solutions  Chapter 17 - Indigenous Autonomy: Opportunities and Pitfalls  Chapter 18 - The implementation paradox: Ambiguities of prior consultation and free, prior, and informed consent (FPIC) for Indigenous peoples' agency in resource extraction in Latin America  Chapter 19 - Indigenous-led spaces in environmental governance: Implications for self-determined development  Part III - Relations with the Earth  Chapter 20 - The Role of Traditional Environmental Knowledge in Planetary Well-Being  Chapter 21 - Building Kia i Futures: Pu uhonua o Pu uhuluhulu and Protecting Mauna Kea  Chapter 22 - Place attachment, sacred geography, and solidarity: Indigenous conceptions of development as meaningful life in Mongolia and Norway  Chapter 23 - Development & Territorial Control  Chapter 24 - Indigenous Peoples: Extraction and Extractivism  Chapter 25 - Rights of Nature: Law as a Tool for Indigenous-led Development  Chapter 26 - Indigenous Peoples and International Institutions: Indigenous Peoples' Diplomacies at the United Nations  Chapter 27 - Science, Technology and Indigenous Development  Part IV - Engaging with Capitalism  Chapter 28 - Colonial Potosí: Setting the stage for global capitalist development  Chapter 29 - Mapuche's disagreements with development: a critical perspective from local spaces  Chapter 30 - Nga Whai Take: Reframing Indigenous Development  Chapter 31 - Chickasaw Spring: Economic Development and Resurgent Sovereignty  Chapter 32 - Ser Camaleón: Indigenous Community-Based Tourism for Emancipatory Futures  Chapter 33 - Indigenous Development: The Role of Indigenous Values and Traditions for Restoring Indigenous Food Sovereignty  Chapter 34 - External Facilitators, Tourism, and Indigenous Development: Insights from Bangladesh  Part V - Migration and City Life  Chapter 35 - Indigenous Mobilities  Chapter 36 - From Runas to Universal Travelers: The Case of the Kichwa Nationality-Otavalo Pueblo. A Liberating Experience of Development  Chapter 37 - Imazighen of France: Developing Indigeneity in Diaspora  Chapter 38 - Communal Labor and Sharing Systems  Chapter 39 - Miskitu Migrants Facing the Pandemic Together in Panama  Chapter 40 - Fighting and Surviving in Oaxacalifornia  Chapter 41 - Lessons from Cahokia: Indigeneity and the Future of the Settler City  Chapter 42 - Designing Decolonization? Architecture and Indigenous Development  Chapter 43 - Urban Futurities: Identity, Place and Property Development by Indigenous Communities in the City  Part VI - Looking to the Future  Chapter 44 - Literatures in Indigenous Languages and Education as Development  Chapter 45 - Giving Form to Indigenous Futures Through Monumental Architecture, Art, and Technology  Chapter 46 - Fourth World Filmic Interventions  Chapter 47 - Indigenous Online  Chapter 48 - Indigenous Youth in Intercultural Universities: New Sites of Knowledge Production and Leadership Training in Mexico and Latin America  Chapter 49 - Indigenous Data Futures: Empowering the Next One-Hundred Generations  Chapter 50 - Climate change and sustainable development in the Pacific: the case of Samoa  Part VII - Concluding Voices  Chapter 51 - The Power of Our Present Futures  Chapter 52 - In Cañamomo Lomaprieta, We Grow Life