Because This Land Is Who We Are : : Indigenous Practices of Environmental Repossession.

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Bibliographic Details
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Place / Publishing House:London : : Bloomsbury Publishing Plc,, 2024.
©2024.
Year of Publication:2024
Edition:1st ed.
Language:English
Physical Description:1 online resource (193 pages)
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Table of Contents:
  • Cover
  • Contents
  • List of Figures
  • Introduction
  • From across the Seas, We Are All Connected
  • Who We Are and How This Book Came to Be
  • Environmental Dispossession
  • Environmental Repossession
  • Indigenous Resurgence and the Need to Account for Environmental Repossession
  • Book Outline
  • Chapter 1 For All Our Kin: A Relational Understanding of Environmental Responsibilities
  • Relational Ontology, Kincentric Ecology, and Kinship
  • Anchoring Environmental Repossession in Our Own Relational Ontologies
  • Kapu Aloha
  • Kaitiakitanga-Land as Pedagogy and a wanaka at Wanaka
  • Mino Bimaadiziwin: An Anishinaabe Philosophy for Living the Good Life (on the Land, in the City, and in the University)
  • Chapter Summary
  • Chapter 2 The Practices and Praxis of Indigenous Environmental Repossession
  • Occupations, Blockades, and Resistance Camps: Indigenous Direct Action as Repossession
  • Vernacular Sovereignty in the Everyday
  • Alliance-Making and Collaboration with Others
  • Performative Action: Cultural Production and Indigenous Activism
  • Chapter 3 Kūkulu: Pillars of Mauna Kea Exhibit
  • … e welina mai nei … welcome …
  • Kaʻi Kūkulu: He aha la he kūkulu
  • Hānau Ka Mauna, the Mountain Is Born
  • Historical Acts of Kānaka Resistance
  • Ku Kiaʻi Mauna, Mountain Protectors Rise
  • Kūkulu and Indigenous Repossession
  • Kūkulu and Community Working Groups
  • Oli Kūkulu
  • Kūkulu as Evolving Kānaka Hawaiʻi Cartography
  • Awakening Ancestral Alignments: Opening Day Performance
  • Kūkulu and the Non-Kānaka Ally
  • Kaʻi Kūkulu-Lasting Impressions
  • Acknowledgments
  • Chapter 4 Cultivating Boundary Crossers: Trespass Gardening in the Stonefields
  • Learning Repossession
  • Exclusion from Joint Cultural and Natural Heritage
  • A Catalyst for More Assertive Activism: Ihumātao and the SHA
  • Taniwha Club: Reclaiming Focus.
  • Training for Next-Gen Protestors
  • Going Viral, Going Radical, and Going Legit
  • Neo/Colonial Transgressions and Boundary (Re)Crossing
  • He Mutunga
  • Acknowledgments
  • Chapter 5 Gathering for Wellness in Biigtigong Nishnaabeg
  • Introduction
  • Gathering as Connection with Places, Knowledge, and People
  • Nishnaabeg Research Creation
  • Biigtigong Experiences of Dispossession and Impact on Wellness
  • Biigtigong's Healing Movement
  • Reclaiming Our Original Gathering Place at the Mouth of the Pic
  • Moose Camp
  • Bringing Our Women Back Home
  • Being Anishinaabe Together Again
  • Acknowledgments
  • Conclusion-The Land Is Who We Are
  • Centering Kinship Relationships and Care in Environmental Repossession
  • Linking Direct Action to Everyday Practices of Environmental Repossession
  • Affirming Indigeneity through Daily Renewal
  • Indigenous Pedagogies and Leadership in Repossession
  • Environmental Repossession as an Expression of Indigenous Rights
  • Glossary of Indigenous Phrases
  • Hawaiʻi Terms
  • Nga kupu Māori
  • Anishinaabe Terms
  • References
  • Author Biographies
  • Index.