1st Edition

Indigenous Wellbeing and Enterprise Self-Determination and Sustainable Economic Development

Edited By Rick Colbourne, Robert B. Anderson Copyright 2020
352 Pages 20 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

352 Pages 20 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

In this book, we explore the economic wellbeing of Indigenous peoples globally through case studies that provide practical examples of how Indigenous wellbeing is premised on sustainable self- determination that is in turn dependent on a community’s evolving model for economic development, its cultural traditions, its relationship to its traditional territories and its particular spiritual... Read more

Introduction Rick Colbourne and Robert B. Anderson

1 Invitation to ethical space: a dialogue on sustainability and reconciliation Reg Crowshoe and David Lertzman

2 Coyote learns commerce Joseph Scott Gladstone

3 Resistance to ‘development’ amongst the Kogui of the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta Aili Pyhala

4 Consultation or free, informed and prior consent? A comparative legal analysis of Indigenous consultation during natural resource activities in Australia and Canada Madeline E. Taylor

5 Towards measuring Indigenous sustainability: merging vernacular and modern knowledge Maor Kohn, Meidad Kissinger and Avinoam Meir

6 The Inuit: sustaining themselves, the Arctic and the World Peter Hough

7 Self-gentrification as a pro-active response to tourism development: cases of Indigenous entrepreneurship in mainland China and Taiwan Jin Hooi Chan, Shih- Yu Chen, Zhongjuan Ji, Ying Zhang and Xiaoguang Qi

8 What is a river? Cross-disciplinary and Indigenous assessment Tero Mustonen and Pauliina Feodoroff

9 Indigenous and Community Conserved Areas (ICCAs) in Galiza: indigeneity or peasanthood? Joam Evans Pim

10 Sustainable development through Indigenous community-based enterprises Mario Vazquez-Maguirre

11 Andean enterprises: a case study of Bolivia’s Royal Quinoa entrepreneurs Tamara Stenn

12 Relational and social aspects of Indigenous entrepreneurship: the Hupacasath case Irene Henriques, Rick Colbourne, Ana Maria Peredo and Robert B. Anderson

Index

Biography

Rick Colbourne is Algonquin Anishinaabe. He is a Fulbright Fellow and Assistant Professor in Indigenous Leadership and Management at Carleton University’s Sprott School of Business. His research is focused on understanding the intersection of Indigenous ways of knowing and organizing economic development and entrepreneurship.

Robert B. Anderson is Professor Emeritus at the Hill/Levene Schools of Business, University of Regina. His areas of interest include entrepreneurship/economic development, resource management/sustainable development, corporate social responsibility, corporate/Indigenous alliances, Indigenous land claims/economic development, financial reporting in Indigenous organizations and the creation/commercialization of intellectual property.