1 / 16

Indigenous Peoples

Indigenous Peoples. ANTH 146. Terms. Indigenous peoples • Tribal / Tribal people Genocide • Ethnocide Terra Nullius • Social Darwinism Imperialism Economies and • Colonialism Exchange . Indigenous People

oded
Télécharger la présentation

Indigenous Peoples

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Indigenous Peoples ANTH 146

  2. Terms • Indigenous peoples • Tribal / Tribal people • Genocide • Ethnocide • Terra Nullius • Social Darwinism • Imperialism • Economies and • Colonialism • Exchange

  3. Indigenous People • claim their lands because they were the 1st or have occupied them since time immemorial • are groups that have been conquered by peoples racially, ethnically, or culturally different from themselves (Colonization, Westernization, Urbanization and the role of Nation State)

  4. Native peoples of the Americas share many parallels with indigenous peoples today • Indigenous peoples had no place in the making of the Nation-state.

  5. Social Darwinism • Theory of social evolution • Based on Darwin’s theory of evolution • Scientific support for imperialism • Proved Western superiority • Justified imperialism in the name of progress.

  6. Social Darwinism • Placed societies on an evolutionary framework • Hierarchy with indigenous and tribal peoples at the bottom and Western societies at the top • Natural order of things was for stronger, more advanced people to conquer and rule over weaker, more backward ones

  7. To overcome “backwardness” and indigenous society was urged to: • Abandon its traditional way of life • Abandon its language • Cease to exist as a separate society • Assimilate with the population

  8. Ethnocide • Conquest of the indigenous peoples was justified • They were not fully human (no rights) • Need to civilize them • Development • Indigenous peoples stand in the way of development

  9. If indigenous peoples unwilling to assimilate • They undermine the State • Impede modernization

  10. Economies • Definition: Making or getting a living • Production, Distribution, Consumption • Economic types: • Foraging, food-collecting  reciprocal exchange, mobile bands, consumption for survival • Horticulture, garden cultivation  redistribution by chiefs for prestige • Pastoralism  redistribution Agriculture  market exchange, private land ownership Industrialization – of goods and food  market exchange, stratified social classes, consumption goal in itself • Service/information economies

  11. Exchange • Exchange (distribution of goods) promotes social cohesion • Major types of exchange: • Reciprocity • Redistribution • Market

  12. Reciprocity • Food collecting, small-scale societies • Egalitarian • Fosters long-term relations • Everyone taken care of  moral economy • Redistribution • Centralized collection of surplus (food, goods, etc.) by chief • Redistribution through feasting – provides for all • Often competitive -- gain in status, prestige

  13. Market Exchange • Buying/selling of commodities (even food) • Direct exchange of goods (barter) • Exchange through money

  14. Nomads: Foragers/Pastoralists • Highly mobile • Inconvenient to nation-states • Straddle national boundaries • Disrupt the imaginary map of homogenous development

  15. Hunter and Gatherer • Pastoralists • Animal husbandry • Horticulturalists • Swidden agriculture / slash and burn

  16. Indigenous cultures are not extinguished by natural laws but by political processes that are susceptible to human controls.

More Related