Indigenous Homelessness : Perspectives from Canada, Australia, and New Zealand.
Material type:
- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9780887555282
- 362.5/92089
- HV4493 .I535 2016
Cover -- Contents -- Illustrations -- Introduction -- Part 1: Canada -- Chapter 1. Indigenous Homelessness: Canadian Context -- Chapter 2. "They Don't Let Us Look after Each Other Like We Used To": Reframing Indigenous Homeless Geographies as Home/Journeying in the Northwest Territories, Canada -- Chapter 3. The Importance of Hidden Homelessness in the Housing Strategies of Urban Indigenous People -- Chapter 4. No Dumping: Indigenousness and the Racialized Police Transport of the Urban Homeless -- Chapter 5. Indigenous and Non-Indigenous Respondents to the Health and Housing in Transition (HHit) Study: An Intersectional Approach -- Chapter 6. The Inclusion of Indigenous Voices in Co-Constructing "Home": Indigenous Homelessness in a Northern Semi-Urban Community in Manitoba -- Chapter 7. Community-Engaged Scholarship: A Path to New Solutions for Old Problems in Indigenous Homelessness -- Chapter 8. "All We Need Is Our Land": Exploring Southern Alberta Urban Indigenous Homelessness -- Chapter 9. Rural Indigenous Homelessness in Canada -- Part 2: Australia -- Chapter 10. Indigenous Homelessness: Australian Context -- Chapter 11. Indigenous Fringe Dwelling in Geraldton, Western Australia: A Colonial Legacy -- Chapter 12. Looking through the Service Lens: Case Studies in Indigenous Homelessness in Two Australian Towns -- Chapter 13. "We Are Good-Hearted People, We Like to Share": Definitional Dilemmas of Crowding and Homelessness in Urban Indigenous Australia -- Chapter 14. Enforcing "Normality": A Case Study of the Role of the "Three-Strikes" Housing Policy Model in Australian Indigenous Homelessness -- Part 3: New Zealand -- Chapter 15. Indigenous Homelessness: New Zealand Context -- Chapter 16. Tūrangawaewae Kore: Nowhere to Stand -- Chapter 17. Emplaced Cultural Practices through which Homeless Men Can Be Māori -- Conclusion -- Contributors.
Being homeless in one's homeland is a colonial legacy for many Indigenous people in settler societies. The construction of Commonwealth nation-states from colonial settler societies depended on the dispossession of Indigenous peoples from their lands.
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Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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