-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 0
/
Copy pathAppendix.html
27 lines (27 loc) · 6.93 KB
/
Appendix.html
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.1 plus MathML 2.0//EN" "http://www.w3.org/Math/DTD/mathml2/xhtml-math11-f.dtd"><html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><!--This file was converted to xhtml by LibreOffice - see https://cgit.freedesktop.org/libreoffice/core/tree/filter/source/xslt for the code.--><head profile="http://dublincore.org/documents/dcmi-terms/"><meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="application/xhtml+xml; charset=utf-8"/><title xml:lang="en-US">- no title specified</title><meta name="DCTERMS.title" content="" xml:lang="en-US"/><meta name="DCTERMS.language" content="en-US" scheme="DCTERMS.RFC4646"/><meta name="DCTERMS.source" content="http://xml.openoffice.org/odf2xhtml"/><meta name="DCTERMS.issued" content="2020-02-12T03:09:29.036225099" scheme="DCTERMS.W3CDTF"/><meta name="DCTERMS.modified" content="2020-02-12T03:44:01.535771720" scheme="DCTERMS.W3CDTF"/><meta name="DCTERMS.provenance" content="" xml:lang="en-US"/><meta name="DCTERMS.subject" content="," xml:lang="en-US"/><link rel="schema.DC" href="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" hreflang="en"/><link rel="schema.DCTERMS" href="http://purl.org/dc/terms/" hreflang="en"/><link rel="schema.DCTYPE" href="http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/" hreflang="en"/><link rel="schema.DCAM" href="http://purl.org/dc/dcam/" hreflang="en"/><style type="text/css">
@page { }
table { border-collapse:collapse; border-spacing:0; empty-cells:show }
td, th { vertical-align:top; font-size:12pt;}
h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6 { clear:both;}
ol, ul { margin:0; padding:0;}
li { list-style: none; margin:0; padding:0;}
/* "li span.odfLiEnd" - IE 7 issue*/
li span. { clear: both; line-height:0; width:0; height:0; margin:0; padding:0; }
span.footnodeNumber { padding-right:1em; }
span.annotation_style_by_filter { font-size:95%; font-family:Arial; background-color:#fff000; margin:0; border:0; padding:0; }
span.heading_numbering { margin-right: 0.8rem; }* { margin:0;}
.P1 { font-size:12pt; font-family:Futura Lt BT; writing-mode:page; }
.P2 { font-size:36pt; font-family:Futura Lt BT; writing-mode:page; }
.P3 { font-size:12pt; font-family:Futura Lt BT; writing-mode:page; }
.P4 { font-size:12pt; font-family:Liberation Serif; writing-mode:page; font-weight:bold; }
.P5 { font-size:36pt; font-family:Liberation Serif; writing-mode:page; }
.P6 { font-size:12pt; font-family:Liberation Serif; writing-mode:page; }
.P7 { font-size:10pt; margin-left:0.2354in; margin-right:0in; text-indent:-0.2354in; font-family:Liberation Serif; writing-mode:page; font-style:italic; }
.Standard { font-size:12pt; font-family:Liberation Serif; writing-mode:page; }
.T2 { font-style:normal; }
.T3 { font-size:24pt; }
.T4 { font-weight:bold; }
/* ODF styles with no properties representable as CSS */
.Footnote_20_Symbol .T1 .T5 { }
</style></head><body dir="ltr" style="max-width:8.5in;margin-top:0.7874in; margin-bottom:0.7874in; margin-left:0.7874in; margin-right:0.7874in; "><p class="P1">Appendix: </p><p class="P1"> </p><p class="P2">DEALING WITH FEELINGS OF UNCERTAINTY <span class="T3">AMID EXPECTATIONS OF ENTITLEMENT</span></p><p class="P5"> </p><p class="P6"><span class="T1">from: </span><span class="T4">“Uncertainty, Anger, and Settler States of Feeling</span></p><p class="P4"> </p><p class="Standard">The people I interviewed who opposed land claims were angry and resentful that</p><p class="Standard">they were forced to feel such uncertainty; they saw it as unexpected and unfair.</p><p class="Standard">Many made arguments that the economic uncertainty brought on by Indigenous</p><p class="Standard">land rights meant they could not carry out business and farming properly; they</p><p class="Standard">could not plan or develop their businesses and their communities. They organized</p><p class="Standard">protests, arguing that their cultures and communities were “at risk” (Mackey</p><p class="Standard">2005 ). Many also spoke longingly of “before,” when they had been certain and</p><p class="Standard">secure in their lives, land, and futures. The way they argued against land rights</p><p class="Standard">suggested a feeling that never before had their faith in their secure ownership of </p><p class="Standard">property, and their trust in the territorial integrity of nation, been betrayed in this</p><p class="Standard">way. Uncertainty as a result of Indigenous land rights, I suggest, understandably</p><p class="Standard">disrupts longstanding “settled expectations” of entitlement. States of anger about</p><p class="Standard">uncertainty implicitly construct an opposite normative state of affairs in which</p><p class="Standard">settlers and the settler nation-state did, or believed it did, have certain and settled</p><p class="Standard">entitlement to the land taken from Indigenous peoples.</p><p class="Standard"> </p><p class="Standard">The passionate anger about uncertainty expressed by the non-Native people</p><p class="Standard">I interviewed should not be surprising. It makes sense that if people feel their</p><p class="Standard">property and their expectations of a particular life and future might be suddenly</p><p class="Standard">and unexpectedly destroyed, they will feel endangered, uncertain, and angry. We</p><p class="Standard">can imagine that generations of settlers have grown up with ubiquitous narratives</p><p class="Standard">about how their families (and other families like theirs) have worked hard on the</p><p class="Standard">land to build the nation. Such narratives have never before seemed to be at odds</p><p class="Standard">with the national narrative or with the settled laws of the land. The people I spoke</p><p class="Standard">to seemed to have been thrown into a state of vertigo. Their settled worlds seemed</p><div class="Standard">upside down.”<span class="Footnote_20_anchor" title="Footnote: “Unsettling Expectations : (Un)certainty, Settler States of Feeling, Law, and Decolonization”. Canadian Journal of Law and Society / Revue Canadienne Droit et Société , 2014, Volume 29, no. 2, pp. 235 – 252 . doi:10.1017/cls.2014.10"><a href="#ftn0" id="body_ftn0">1</a></span></div><p class="Standard"> </p><p class="Standard"> </p><p class="P3">Decolonization requires de-centering ideas that white people problems are the most important problems. They are not. While politicians in 2020 argue about the future of their delusions, <span class="T5">the repatriation of indigenous lands to indigenous peoples can be done and should be done.</span></p><p class="P7"><span class="footnodeNumber"><a class="Footnote_20_Symbol" id="ftn0" href="#body_ftn0">1</a></span><span class="T2">“Unsettling Expectations</span> : <span class="T2">(Un)certainty, Settler States of Feeling, Law, and Decolonization”. </span>Canadian Journal of Law and Society / Revue Canadienne Droit et Société<span class="T2"> , 2014, Volume 29, no. 2, pp. 235 – 252 . doi:10.1017/cls.2014.10</span></p></body></html>