1st Edition
Indigenous Reconciliation and Decolonization Narratives of Social Justice and Community Engagement
Chapter 1: Introduction
Ranjan Datta
Part One: Meanings of Reconciliation
Chapter 2: Reconciliation as Decolonizing Ceremony
Ranjan Datta
Chapter 3: Turtle Island to Babylon
Ahmad Majid
Chapter 4: This Reconciliation is for the Colonizer
Andrea Landry
Chapter 5: Language and Reconciliation: An Indigenous Woman’s Perspective
Edie Venne
Chapter 6: The Trapline: A Pathway of Indigenous Land-based Reconciliation
Colleen Charles
Part Two Responsibilities for Land and Reconciliation
Chapter 7: Reconciliation through Kits and Tests? Reconsidering Newcomer Responsibilities on Indigenous Land
Nisha Toomey, Yi Chien Jade Ho, Deanna Del Vecchio with Eve Tuck
Chapter 8: Theorizing Land, Responsibility and Reconciliation through Black Women standpoint
Njoki Wane and Hermia Anthony
Chapter 9: Reconciliation as Rationalization of State Violence: Activist Performance as Resistance to TRC politics in Chile and Canada
Manuela Valle-Castro
Chapter 10: Embracing reconciliation in the face of adversity: An intersectional perspective on land, immigration, and anti-racist learning
Jada Renee Koushik and Naomi Mumbi Maina-Okori
Chapter 11: Indigenous and Newcomer Women in Journeys of Reconciliation: Building Relationships and Learning from One Another
Judy White
Chapter 12: Building Bridges among Indigenous and Immigrant Communities: A Visible Minority Immigrant Woman’s Journey
Jebunnessa Chapola
Chapter 13: Humanizing Community-engaged Participatory Research through Relational Practice
Carolyn M. Gaspar and Clifford T. Ballantyne
Chapter 14: Reflecting on the Privilege of the Canadian Treaties
Margot A. Hurlbert
Part Three: How to Move Forward
Chapter 15: Conclusion: Reconciliation as Taking Responsibilities
Biography
Ranjan Datta is Canada Research Chair-II at the Department of Humanities at Mount Royal University, Calgary, Canada.






