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  • Format: ePub

Around the world indigenous peoples remain largely alienated from how data about them, their lands, and their cultures is collected, used and applied. This book investigates this problem, demonstrating how it disenfranchises indigenous peoples from shaping policy to meet their needs.

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Produktbeschreibung
Around the world indigenous peoples remain largely alienated from how data about them, their lands, and their cultures is collected, used and applied. This book investigates this problem, demonstrating how it disenfranchises indigenous peoples from shaping policy to meet their needs.


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Autorenporträt
Maggie Walter (Palawa) (PhD, FASSA) is Distinguished Professor of Sociology at the University of Tasmania, Australia. Publishing extensively in the field of Indigenous Data, including Indigenous Statistics (with C. Andersen 2013 Routledge), Maggie is a founding member of the Maiam nayri Wingara Indigenous Data Sovereignty Collective and the Global Indigenous Data Alliance. Tahu Kukutai (Ng¿ti Tiipa, Ng¿ti Kinohaku, Te Aup¿uri) (PhD) is Professor of Demography at the National Institute of Demographic and Economic Analysis, Aotearoa New Zealand. She co-edited Indigenous Data Sovereignty: Toward an Agenda and is a founding member of the M¿ori Data Sovereignty Network Te Mana Raraunga and the Global Indigenous Data Alliance. Stephanie Russo Carroll (Ahtna-Native Village of Kluti-Kaah, Sicilian-descent) (DrPH, MPH) is Assistant Professor of Public Health and Associate Director for the Native Nations Institute at the University of Arizona, USA. A researcher active at the nexus of Indigenous governance, the environment, community wellness and data, Stephanie co-founded the US Indigenous Data Sovereignty Network and is a founding member and chair of the Global Indigenous Data Alliance. Desi Rodriguez-Lonebear (Northern Cheyenne and Chicana) (PhD) is a social demographer who researches the intersection of Indigenous erasure, data and inequality. She is Assistant Professor of Sociology and American Indian Studies at the University of California, Los Angeles. Desi co-founded the US Indigenous Data Sovereignty Network and is a founding member of the Global Indigenous Data Alliance.
Rezensionen
'Another valuable element of the collection is the repeated demonstration that the mining of Indigenous data by non-Indigenous nations is just the most recent example of colonial powers extracting resources from Indigenous People, communities, and nations. Making this connection helps detach the common misperception that data merely demonstrate objective facts and establishes that at best the current social construction of data prioritizes the needs of dominant society at the expense of Indigenous People.'

- JEFFREY D. BURNETTE, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Rochester Institute of Technology. NAIS Journal