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list price: $90.00
edition:Hardcover
also available: Paperback eBook
category: History
published: Jun 2012
ISBN:9780774822879
publisher: UBC Press

Fractured Homeland

Federal Recognition and Algonquin Identity in Ontario

by Bonita Lawrence

tagged: native american
Description

In 1992, the Algonquins of Pikwakanagan, the only federally recognized Algonquin reserve in Ontario, launched a comprehensive land claim. The action not only drew attention to the fact that Canada had acquired Algonquin land without negotiating a treaty, but it also focused attention on the two-thirds of Algonquins who have never been recognized as Indian. Fractured Homeland is Bonita Lawrence’s stirring account of how the claim forced federally unrecognized Algonquin in Ontario to confront both the issue of their own identity and the failure of Algonquin leaders – who launched the claim – to develop a more inclusive vision of nationhood.

About the Author

Bonita Lawrence

Contributor Notes

Bonita Lawrence (Mi’kmaw) teaches Indigenous studies at York University. She is the author of “Real” Indians and Others: Mixed-Blood Urban Native People and Indigenous Nationhood (2004).

Awards
  • Short-listed, Canada Prize in the Social Sciences, Canadian Federation for the Humanities and Social Sciences
Editorial Review

A good case study of a people that have been too rarely discussed and too often misunderstood. Recommended.

— CHOICE, Vol. 50 No. 05
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