Críticas:
... a welcome help to understanding ourselves as a nation and as individuals ... Greg Poelzer and Ken Coates offer an accessible primer to the many ways Canada's Indigenous peoples are retaking charge of their lives. -- Jean Barman, 2015 recipient of the Governor General's History Award for Scholarly Research * Canada's History * The book provides an excellent summary of the work of various Canadian Indigenous political scholars such as Kiera Ladner, Bonita Beaty, Dan Russell, John Borrows and Glenn Coulthard. The treaty theme runs throughout the book, with historical and contemporary examples. This allows the reader to understand the past but also facilitates awareness of the modern-day treaty process that is underway in some parts of Canada. -- Cora Voyageur, professor of sociology at the University of Calgary, and member of the Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation * Alberta Views, Vol. 19 No. 10 * What is clear from this survey is that no consensus exists around how to improve Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal relations. This sketch by Poelzer and Coates does, however, do more than provide the reader with a useful review of proposals aimed at solving the "Indian problem" in Canada; it allows the authors to situate their own approach within a very complex debate characterised by a diversity of opinions (both within the Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal intellectual communities). From Treaty Peoples to Treaty Nation's originality flows from its focus on the practical elements of these problems. By contrast, most other scholars' approaches are philosophical, idealistic, and theoretical ... With the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada's release of its Final Report earlier this year, Poelzer and Coates' work could not be timelier. -- Darius Bosse * Saskatchewan Law Review * The greatest value of this volume [is that] it seeks to force productive debate, not fruitless fingerpointing and rancor. Whether or not it succeeds in doing so for Canada remains to be seen. Whether the United States, including the many indigenous peoples in the Great Plains, takes notice and begins more meaningful discussions of Americans as "Treaty Peoples" and a "Treaty Nation" likewise remains unclear. As a region with strong indigenous history and presence, these are debates worth having - on both sides of the border. -- Brenden W. Rensink, Charles Redd Center for Western Studies Brigham Young University * Great Plains Research *
Reseña del editor:
This accessible book will be of interest to scholars, politicians, students, Aboriginal leaders, government officials, business people, media commentators, and all Canadians who care about the future of their country.
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