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Introduction
Journeys and silences (Garth Cant, Aotearoa New Zealand)
Resisting encroachment and re-establishing identity
The Alta case: national and international consequences (Henry Minde, Norway); Sámi reindeer management (Jan Åge Riseth, Norway); Paradigm shifts in Southern Sámi research (Åke Jünge, Norway); Globalisation from below: the revitalisation of a Coastal Sámi community (Torill Nyseth and Paul Pedersen, Norway).
Traditional identities and contemporary perspectives
Formalising Sámi land rights in Norway (Erling Berge), Sámi, citizenship and non-recognition in the EU (Rebecca Lawrence, Sweden); Hawaiian connection to the land (Katrina Oliveira, Hawai‘i).
First Nations, parks and conservation
Conservation and Indigenous rights in Australia and Sweden ( Michael Adams, Australia); Laponia II: Lapland‘s World Heritage Site? (Kristina Lasko, Sweden); Building wilderness: Te Urewera National Park (Chris Castagna, Hawai‘i); Ngāi Tahu involvement in Coastal Management of Akaroa Harbour (Sarah Hemmingsen, Australia).
Shifting sands, shifting policies: Crown and Māori in New Zealand
Policy development in modern Aotearoa New Zealand (Anake Goodall); Ngāi Tahu in a contested post-colonial New Zealand (Garth Cant); 21st Century Crown confiscations: the Foreshore and Seabed Act (Angeline Greensill); Thinking globally, acting locally: international human rights and double standards? (Justine Inns).
Sustaining resilient communities: Asian experiences
Korean farmers building community networks (Cheong Ji Woong and Cheong Chija Kim); Participation in environmental management in Vietnam (Binh Vu Trong, Viet Nam) Fujian culture in Okinawa (Akiyoshi Takahashi and Li Guoqing); Hmong Gardeners cultivating knowledge, land and culture (Kathy De Master, Wisconsin).
Community actions and educational initiatives
Rural Aboriginal men and participatory action research (Yarrabah Men’s Health Group, Australia); Representations of Aboriginal people in Australian schools (Pat Cavanagh); Teaching Indigenous studies at the University of Tromsø (Per Klemetsen Hætta and Else Grete Broderstad, Norway).
Discourses and Silences has been published by the Department of Geography, at the University of Canterbury in New Zealand, on behalf of our counterparts: Norut Social Science Research and the University of Tromsø in Norway; the University of Hawai’i in the USA; the Australian Catholic University and the University of Wollongong in Australia; Waikato University in New Zealand.
The volume contains 23 chapters, maps, tables, figures and illustrations and runs to 336 pages.
The ISBN is 0-473-10628-0.
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