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list price: $95.00
edition:Hardcover
also available: eBook
category: History
published: Aug 1997
ISBN:9780774806091
publisher: UBC Press

Walking in Indian Moccasins

The Native Policies of Tommy Douglas and the CCF

by Laurie Barron

tagged: native american studies, native american, post-confederation (1867-), prairie provinces (ab, mb, sk)
Description

Walking in Indian Moccasins is the first work to offer a different view of the Tommy Douglas provincial government in Sakatchewan: their policies, their applications, and their shortcomings. Much more than that, however, it is a careful account of the development of Indian and Metis people in Saskatchewan in the post-war period. The goal of the CCF was to “walk in Indian moccasins,” promising a degree of empathy with Native society in bringing about reforms. In reality, this aim was not always honoured in practice and essentially meant integration for the Indians of the province and total assimilation for the Metis.

About the Author

Laurie Barron

Contributor Notes

F. Laurie Barron is a professor in the Department of Native Studies, University of Saskatchewan.

Editorial Reviews

Has the merit of pulling together a wide and varied body of material and giving us the first comprehensive portrait of a neglected aspect of the Saskatchewan CCF's reform agenda. It is well worth reading by anyone interested in the history of government Indian and Metis policy in Canada.

— Prairie Forum, 23:1

An important contribution to our understanding of Saskatchewan's Aboriginal policies under CCF premier Tommy Douglas ... Walking in Indian Moccasins is especially valuable due to its focus on provincial government Aboriginal policy in the recent past. It provides a model for future studies of both Alberta's and Manitoba's Aboriginal policies immediately after the second World War ... the book greatly advances our understanding of the Native Peoples of the prairie provinces in the twentieth century.

— Saskatchewan History
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