Author(s)

;

Publisher

Publication Year

ISBN: 9781773634173-12

Categories: , , ,

Tag:

 
View more details about this title
on the publisher's website:

Social Control, Settler Colonialism, and Representations of Violence against Indigenous Women

New!

From: Critical Perspectives on Social Control and Social Regulation in Canada

$3.00

From Canada’s Refusal to Acknowledge MMIWG to Emerging Forms of Recognition – Settler Colonial State-Building, Benevolence, and Representations of Indigenous Women – Contested “Truths” – Inquiries and “Fact” Collection as Technologies of Settler Colonial Social Control – MMIWG National Commission of Inquiry – Refusal and Resistance to Social Control – Discussion Questions – Recommended Resources – Glossary – References

Preview

Contributors

Danielle Bird

Danielle Bird (Nehiyaw) is a member of the Saddle Lake Cree Nation in Alberta and has familial ties to the Mistawasis Nehiyawak in west central Saskatchewan. She graduated from the University of Saskatchewan in 2016 with a Bachelor of Arts in sociology and a minor in Indigenous studies (with great distinction). Bird is currently an MA student in the Department of Indigenous Studies at the University of Saskatchewan, where her research focuses on concepts of resilience among formerly incarcerated Indigenous women in Saskatchewan.

Julie Kaye

Julie Kaye is an assistant professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of Saskatchewan. Working in the areas of critical criminology, community research and organizing, and feminist, decolonial scholarship, Dr. Kaye’s research examines settler colonialism and Indigenous-led responses to colonial gender violence and criminalization as well as harm reduction, con- sent, self-determination, and body sovereignty. She is the author of Responding to Human Trafficking: Dispossession, Colonial Violence, and Resistance among Indigenous and Racialized Women, which examines anti-trafficking responses in the context of settler colonialism in Canada.