Synopses & Reviews
This book brings together two key concerns in development policy: the urgent need for poverty reduction and the situation of indigenous peoples in both developing and industrialized countries. It analyzes patterns of indigenous disadvantage worldwide and explores some difficult questions, including the right balance between autonomy and participation.
Synopsis
This book brings together two of today's leading concerns in development policy - the urgent need to prioritize poverty reduction and the particular circumstances of indigenous peoples in both developing and industrialized countries. The contributors analyse patterns of indigenous disadvantage worldwide, the centrality of the right to self-determination, and indigenous people's own diverse perspectives on development. Several fundamental and difficult questions are explored, including the right balance to be struck between autonomy and participation, and the tension between a new wave of assimilationism in the guise of 'pro-poor' and 'inclusionary' development policies and the fact that such policies may in fact provide new spaces for indigenous peoples to advance their demands. In this regard, one overall conclusion that emerges is that both differences and commonalities must be recognised in any realistic study of indigenous poverty.
About the Author
Robyn Eversole is Research Fellow at the RMIT University, Australia,
John-Andrew McNeish is affiliated to the Institute of Anthropology, University of Bergen and
Alberto Cimadamore is affilliated to the University of Buenos Aires; and advisor to the Latin American Council of Social Sciences (CLACSO).
Table of Contents
1. Introduction: Indigenous Peoples and Poverty - John-Andrew McNeish and Robyn Eversole
PART 1: INDIGENOUS POVERTY
2. Overview: Patterns of Indigenous Disadvantage Worldwide - Robyn Eversole
3. The Conditions of Life and Health for Indigenous Women in Areas of High Marginalization, Chiapas, Mexico - Hector Javier S nchez-P‚rez, Guadalupe Vargas Morales and Josep Mar¡a Jans
4. Scarred Landscapes and Tattooed Faces: Poverty, Identity and Land Conflict in a Taiwanese Indigenous Community - Scott Simon
5. Nutritional Vulnerability in Indigenous Children of the Americas: A Human Rights Issue - Siri Damman
PART 2: INDIGENOUS PEOPLE IN NATION STATES: RIGHTS, CITIZENSHIP, AND SELF-DETERMINATION
6. Overview: The Right to Self-Determination - John-Andrew NcNeish and Robyn Eversole
7. Poverty and International Aid among Russia's Indigenous Peoples - Indra Overland
8. Indigenous Peoples of Southeast Asia: Poverty, Identity and Resistance - Don McCaskill and Jeff Rutherford
9. Tackling Indigenous Disadvantage in the Twenty-First Century: 'Social Inclusion' and Maori in New Zealand - Louise Humpage
10. Political Participation and Poverty among Colombian Indigenous Communities, the Case of the Zen and Mokan Peoples- A. Carolina Borda Ni¤o and Dario Mej¡a Montalvo
11. Indigenous Peoples, Poverty, and Self-Determination in Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and the United States - Stephen Cornell
PART 3: INDIGENOUS PEOPLES' PERSPECTIVES ON DEVELOPMENT
12. Overview: Indigenous Peoples' Perspectives on Development - John-Andrew NcNeish
13. Ecological Wealth versus Social Poverty: Contradictions of and Perspectives on Indigenous Development in Central America and Mexico - Pablo Alarc¢n-Ch ires
14. Indigenous Anti-Poverty Strategies in an Australian Town - Robyn Eversole, Leon Ridgeway and David Mercer
15. Sami Responses to Poverty in the Nordic Countries - Christian Hicks and µnde Somby
16. Conclusions: Poverty, Peoples, and the Meaning of Change - John-Andrew NcNeish and Robyn Eversole
Index