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list price: $95.00
edition:Hardcover
also available: Paperback eBook
category: Social Science
published: Jul 2009
ISBN:9780774816243
publisher: UBC Press

Finding Dahshaa

Self-Government, Social Suffering, and Aboriginal Policy in Canada

by Stephanie Irlbacher-Fox

tagged: native american studies, native american, customs & traditions, political advocacy
Description

The social suffering and self-determination of Indigenous peoples are important public policy issues in Canada today. This book asks a fundamental question regarding Canadian-Aboriginal relations: Are self-government agreements an effective path to self-determination?

 

Finding Dahshaa describes self-government negotiations between Canada and the Dehcho, Délînê, and Inuvialuit and Gwich’in peoples in the Northwest Territories. It contrasts boardroom negotiating sessions with moosehide-tanning camps and community meetings in small northern communities to show that Canada’s Aboriginal policy has failed because injustice and social suffering have become part of the process itself. Moosehide-tanning practices, which embody values central to Dene self-determination, offer an alternative model for negotiations. Through parallel narratives, the author shows how attaining self-determination is akin to finding dahshaa, a rare type of dried, rotted spruce wood essential for achieving success in this core cultural process.

 

An informed and passionate account, with a foreword by Dene National Chief Bill Erasmus, Finding Dahshaa is the first ethnographic study of self-government negotiations in Canada.

About the Author

Stephanie Irlbacher-Fox

Contributor Notes

Stephanie Irlbacher-Fox holds a doctorate in polar studies from Cambridge University and for the past decade has worked for Indigenous peoples on self-government and related political development processes in Canada's Northwest Territories. For more information, visit findingdashaa.ca.

Awards
  • Short-listed, Canadian Aboriginal History Book Prize, Canadian Historical Association
  • Short-listed, Donald Smiley Prize, Canadian Political Science Association
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