Planning for coexistence? : recognizing indigenous rights through land-use planning in Canada and Australia / Libby Porter RMIT University, Australia and Janice Barry University of Manitoba, Canada.
Acknowledgments -- Introduction : the challenge of indigenous coexistence for planning -- Concepts and contexts -- "We are all here to stay" : a "meditation on discomfort" -- Seeing the contact zone : a methodology for analyzing links between everyday and textual practice -- Constructing contact zones : planning and recognition discourses in Victoria and British Columbia -- Stories of planning in (post)colonial Victoria & British Columbia -- The non-recognition of indigenous rights in metropolitan Melbourne -- Negotiating bounded recognition : seeking co-management on the river red gum flood plains -- Neighbour-to-neighbour planning relations along Vancouver's north shore -- Planning for wilp sustainability in the Nass and Skeena river watersheds -- Conceptualizing coexistence in planning theory and practice -- Negotiating, contesting, reframing : indigenous agency in the contact zone -- Bounded recognition : how planning resettles indigenous claims -- Developing intercultural capacity : lessons for planning practice -- Towards coexistence : rethinking planning for indigenous justice -- References.
Summary:
Acknowledgments -- Introduction : the challenge of indigenous coexistence for planning -- Concepts and contexts -- "We are all here to stay" : a "meditation on discomfort" -- Seeing the contact zone : a methodology for analyzing links between everyday and textual practice -- Constructing contact zones : planning and recognition discourses in Victoria and British Columbia -- Stories of planning in (post)colonial Victoria & British Columbia -- The non-recognition of indigenous rights in metropolitan Melbourne -- Negotiating bounded recognition : seeking co-management on the river red gum flood plains -- Neighbour-to-neighbour planning relations along Vancouver's north shore -- Planning for wilp sustainability in the Nass and Skeena river watersheds -- Conceptualizing coexistence in planning theory and practice -- Negotiating, contesting, reframing : indigenous agency in the contact zone -- Bounded recognition : how planning resettles indigenous claims -- Developing intercultural capacity : lessons for planning practice -- Towards coexistence : rethinking planning for indigenous justice -- References
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