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Description

  • Co-op available
  • Galleys available to sales reps, trade publications, and long-lead media
  • Digital galleys on Edelweiss
  • National advertising Library Journal, Native American Entrepreneur, Publishers Weekly, SAY Magazine
  • National print campaign: The Economist, The Progressive, New York Times, Globe & Mail, Financial Times, Yes! Magazine, The American Prospect, Mother Jones, Utne Reader, Corporate Knights
  • Online/social media campaign:
    • Outreach to Tulo Centre of Indigenous Economics, Indigenomics Institute, Resilience.org, Alliance for Renewing Indigenous Economics
    • Promotion on New Society Publishers social media platforms including Facebook, Twitter, our blog, Pinterest, Instagram, and YouTube
  • General eBook marketing plan
    • eBook will be available at the same time as print publication to maximize sales
    • eBook ISBN will be included on all press materials, author and publisher websites, and whenever print ISBN is listed
    • publisher and author will be promoting both e and p through social media
  • Excerpts target for first serial rights: Utne Reader, Yes! Magazine, Open Democracy, Mother Jones, SAY Magazine
  • Promotion through the author's website: www.indigenomicsinstitute.com
  • Bookseller/library promotions: Baker & Taylor Super Annotation, inclusion at APSA, ASA, ASSA, AAA Academic conferences

  • Author is the founder of the Indigenomics Institute, which focuses on modern Indigenous economic design.
  • She has an MBA from the University of Hertfordshire, England.
  • She is of Nuu-chah-nulth descent from the Hesquiaht Nation on Vancouver Island.
  • This book is centered within the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP).
  • The author has introduced the new term “indigenomics,” which has moved from a single word to an entire movement focusing on the building and strengthening of Indigenous economies.
  • Author is known on social media through #indigenomics, Twitter @Hesquiaht 5,000 followers, Facebook @indigenomcsinstitute.
  • This is a new topic and a previously unpublished contribution to new economic thought.
  • This book is an important work in the emerging modern Indigenous economy.
  • It is a guide to fully realizing the potential of the emerging Indigenous economy.
  • It lays out the emerging power shift and the rise of Indigenous economic empowerment.
  • It acknowledges the unfolding story shaping Canada through the law courts that is testing the foundation of the Crown relationship with Indigenous peoples.
  • Indigenomics facilitates a new narrative: Indigenous peoples are economic powerhouses.
  • Includes interviews with six key business leaders, all exceptional in their field
  • Has specific examples and case studies

Audience: Indigenous peoples in the US and Canada, corporations, government, local communities, economic development, and new economy interest groups.

Regional: Alaska, Arizona, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota, South Dakota, Washington, Washington, DC, Wisconsin, Oklahoma, Wyoming

International: This book is centered within the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) and will be of interest of people working with Indigenous peoples globally, particularly in Australia, New Zealand, Africa and South America.

Canada: National Indigenous Economic Development Board report “Reconciliation: Growing Canada's Economy by $27.7 Billion” that outlines how, if all Indigenous peoples had employment, income, education, and yes, poverty rates comparable to that of all Canadians, Canada's GDP would grow by 1.5% or $27.7 billion.
There are 1.4 million people in Canada (or 4% of the Canadian population) who identify as Indigenous.


Acknowledgments

Foreword


Introduction

The Indigenomics Manifestation


1. Through the Lens of Worldview

The Indian Problem

Indigenous Economic Displacement and Marginalization

Indigenous Worldview and Responsibility


2. The Nature of Wealth

Timeline of Money

Ceremony as an Expression of Wealth

The Economic Distortion: Through the Lens of Wealth and Poverty


3. The Landscape of Indigenous Worldview

Principle 1: Everything Is Connected

Principle 2: Story

Principle 3: Animate Life Force

Principle 4: Transformation

Principle 5: The Teachings

Principle 6: Creation Story

Principle 7: Protocol

Principle 8: To Witness

Principle 9: To Make Visible

Principle 10: Renewal


4. "But I Was Never Taught This in School"

A History of the Development of British Columbia


5. The Indigenous Economy

Characteristics of an Indigenous Economy


6. Indian Act Economics

The Indian Act and the Aboriginal Question

The Indian Act Economics Effect: The Conditions for an Indigenous Economic Market Failure

Perception of the Indian Act


7. The Indigenomics Power Center

The Indigenomics Push/Pull Dynamic

7 Rs of the Indigenomics Power Center


8. The Dependancy Illusion

The Great Debunk: Addressing the Illusion


9. The Power Play

And Then Indigenous People Went to Court!

The Legal Spectrum

The Push/Pull Dynamic: An Inception into a New Economic Reality


10. The Power Shift: A Seat at the Economic Table

The Effect of the Emerging Indigenous Power Shift

The Risk of Doing Nothing

The Collective Response to Now


11. The Emerging Modern Indigenous Economy

Setting a Target for Indigenous Economic Growth

Understanding the Growth of the Indigenous Economy

The State of Indigenous Economic Research

Building a Collective Economic Response: The Emerging $100 Billion Indigenous Economy


12. Indigenomics and the Unfolding Media Narrative

Indigenous Business Media Themes

Media Theme 1: Growing Indigenous Business Success

Media Theme 2: Conflict and Risk in Industry Project Development

Media Theme 3: Tone of Media Headings

Media Theme 4: Aboriginal Legal Challenges and New Requirements

Media Theme 5: Indigenous Business Innovation and Leadership

Media Theme 6: Indigenous Worldview

Media Theme 7: Aboriginal Relations/Reconciliation

Media Theme 8: Growing Indigenous Economic Influence

Media Theme 9: Shifting Aboriginal Business Environment

Media Theme 10: Indigenous Ownership

Media Visual Portrayals of Conflict and the Assertion of Aboriginal Rights


13. Building a Toolbox for Economic Reconciliation

Reconciliation and the Pathway to an Inclusive Economy

The Characteristics of an Inclusive Economy

The Indigenomics Toolbox


14. The Global Indigenous Power Shift

Ecuador: The Power Moment

Bolivia: The Law of the Rights of Mother Earth Power Moment

Clayoquot Sound: The War in the Woods Power Moment

New Zealand: The Rights of a River Power Moment

Māori Economy Measured at $50 billion Annually: Power Moment

United Nations Calls for Revolutionary Thinking: Power Moment


15. Indigenomics and the Great Convergence

Economic Distortion: Addressing Dysfunctionality in the New Economy

Regeneration: The Great Convergence

Economic Design for an Inclusive Economy

The Great Economic Convergence and the Transformation of Meaning

An Economy of Meaning

Addressing the Economic Disconnect


16. A Seat at the Economic Table


Appendix A: The Universal Declaration of the Rights of Mother Earth

Appendix B: Truth and Reconcilation Commision Call to Action #92


Notes

Index

About the Author

About New Society Publishers

Sujets

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 22 avril 2021
Nombre de lectures 6
EAN13 9781897408483
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 1590 Mo

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