Governance processes often fail to integrate Indigenous perspectives or address issues such as sovereignty, self-determination, and decolonization, making successful policy outcomes difficult to achieve. It is vital for Indigenous and non-Indigenous governments to collaborate in producing sustainable, mutually beneficial outcomes. This volume highlights the importance of authentic Indigenous inclusion in governance processes at national and subnational levels worldwide. Through case studies and best-practice models, it examines the opportunities and barriers Indigenous Peoples face in collaborative governance. In doing so, it offers recommendations for practice and policy that promote social equity.
Recenzijos
The book offers a valuable contribution to our collective understanding of the impact of structural violence and colonialism on Indigenous Peoples All chapters are well-written, informative, and insightful. Duane A. Gill, Virginia Tech
This is an important book that highlights not just the need for inclusive research but also how to apply these approaches to those who are learning and looking to change their work to be inclusive. Stefanie Kunze, Northern Arizona University
List of Illustrations
List of Abbreviations
Introduction: Prioritizing Indigenous Perspectives and Voices in
Collaborative Governance
Michčle Companion and Jason D. Rivera
Part I: Overarching Considerations for Indigenous Collaborative Governance
and Social Equity
Chapter
1. Public Administration and Intergovernmental Collaboration with
and for Indigenous Communities: Pushing a More Equitable Governance Paradigm
Jason D. Rivera
Chapter
2. Developing Research and Project-based Partnerships with
Indigenous Communities
Michčle Companion and Jason D. Rivera
Chapter
3. Indigenous Digital Governance: Principles and Practices for
Self-Determination and Equity
Diane E. Smith
Part II: National Level Topical IssuesExpanding Sovereignty and
Governmental Collaboration
Chapter
4. Engaging Sacred Wisdom in Public Administration: Everyday
Practices of Tribal Governance in Indonesia
Budi Waluyo, Muhammad Syahrul Fuady, and Agus Sunarya Sulaeman
Chapter
5. Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls: Opportunities
Based onCollaborativeGovernance
Michčle Companion
Chapter
6. The Struggles around the Officialization of Mapuche Language and
the Recognition of Indigenous Languages in Chile
Salvador Millaleo
Chapter
7. Enhancing Collaboration for Effective Tribal Hazard Mitigation: A
Comparative Case Study of Indigenous Nations in the Northwest United States
Oluponmile Olonilua and John Aliu
Chapter
8. Indigenous Student Internships: Advancing Social Equity in Higher
Education in the United States
Susan E. Baer, Angela M. Mai, Victor Ferreros, and Daniel Hajdo
Part III: State, Provisional, and Local Case Studies
Chapter
9. Fueled by Conflict: Intergovernmental Relations on the Oneida
Reservation
Rebecca Webster
Chapter
10. From Sunrise to Moonfall: Allyship Construction and the Kaingįng
People of Sub-Amazonian Brazil
Darren R. Reid, Leonel Piovezana, Claudia Battestin, and Kaingįng
Collaborators
Chapter
11. Indigenous Perspectives and Collaborative Governance:
Decolonizing Thunder Bay Public Library, Canada
John Pateman
Chapter
12. Achieving Tribal, Municipal, and County Cooperation in the
United States
Mitchell Berg
Chapter
13. Climate Adaptive Community Capacity Building in Historically
Marginalized Communities in Eastern Connecticut, U.S.A.: Lessons Learned from
Integrating Co-Creative Approaches
LaTasha Maddox and Alicia Tyson
Conclusion: Moving Beyond What Has Been to What Could Be
Jason D. Riveraand Michčle Companion
Index
Michčle Companion is a Professor of Sociology at the University of Colorado-Colorado Springs and President of the International Research Committee on Disasters. She specializes in food and livelihood security. Her recent international work focuses on Indigenous food sovereignty and cultural survival.