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Chapter Twelve Local Knowledge as Traditional Ecological Knowledge: Definition and Ownership
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C. D. James Paci
and Lisa Krebs
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Chapters in this book
- Front Matter i
- Contents v
- Foreword vii
- Acknowledgments xi
- Chapter one Rethinking Modernity and the Discourse of Development in American Indian History, an Introduction 1
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Part One Commerce and Incorporation
- Chapter Two Searching for Salvation and Sovereignty: Blackfeet Oil Leasing and the Reconstruction of the Tribe 27
- Chapter three Minding Their Own Business: The Kiowa-Comanche-Apache Business Committee of the Early 1900s 52
- Chapter Four Casino Roots: The Cultural Production of Twentieth-Century Seminole Economic Development 66
- Chapter Five The Dawn of a New Day? Notes on Indian Gaming in Southern California 91
- Chapter Six The Devil’s in the Details: Tracing the Fingerprints of Free Trade and Its Effects on Navajo Weavers 112
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Part Two Wage Work
- Chapter Seven “All We Needed Was Our Gardens”: Women’s Work and Welfare Reform in the Reservation Economy 133
- Chapter Eight Work and Culture in Southeastern Alaska: Tlingits and the Salmon Fisheries 156
- Chapter Nine Five Dollars a Week to Be “Regular Indians”: Shows, Exhibitions, and the Economics of Indian Dancing, 1880–1930 184
- Chapter Ten Land, Labor, and Leadership: The Political Economy of Hualapai Community Building, 1910–1940 209
- Chapter Eleven Working for Identity: Race, Ethnicity, and the Market Economy in Northern California, 1875–1936 238
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Part Three Methodology and Theoretical Implications
- Chapter Twelve Local Knowledge as Traditional Ecological Knowledge: Definition and Ownership 261
- Chapter Thirteen “Dollar a Day and Glad to Have It”: Work Relief on the Wind River Indian Reservation as Memory 283
- Chapter Fourteen Tribal Capitalism and Native Capitalists: Multiple Pathways of Native Economy 308
- Chapter Fifteen Conclusion 330
- About the Contributors 335
- Index 341
Chapters in this book
- Front Matter i
- Contents v
- Foreword vii
- Acknowledgments xi
- Chapter one Rethinking Modernity and the Discourse of Development in American Indian History, an Introduction 1
-
Part One Commerce and Incorporation
- Chapter Two Searching for Salvation and Sovereignty: Blackfeet Oil Leasing and the Reconstruction of the Tribe 27
- Chapter three Minding Their Own Business: The Kiowa-Comanche-Apache Business Committee of the Early 1900s 52
- Chapter Four Casino Roots: The Cultural Production of Twentieth-Century Seminole Economic Development 66
- Chapter Five The Dawn of a New Day? Notes on Indian Gaming in Southern California 91
- Chapter Six The Devil’s in the Details: Tracing the Fingerprints of Free Trade and Its Effects on Navajo Weavers 112
-
Part Two Wage Work
- Chapter Seven “All We Needed Was Our Gardens”: Women’s Work and Welfare Reform in the Reservation Economy 133
- Chapter Eight Work and Culture in Southeastern Alaska: Tlingits and the Salmon Fisheries 156
- Chapter Nine Five Dollars a Week to Be “Regular Indians”: Shows, Exhibitions, and the Economics of Indian Dancing, 1880–1930 184
- Chapter Ten Land, Labor, and Leadership: The Political Economy of Hualapai Community Building, 1910–1940 209
- Chapter Eleven Working for Identity: Race, Ethnicity, and the Market Economy in Northern California, 1875–1936 238
-
Part Three Methodology and Theoretical Implications
- Chapter Twelve Local Knowledge as Traditional Ecological Knowledge: Definition and Ownership 261
- Chapter Thirteen “Dollar a Day and Glad to Have It”: Work Relief on the Wind River Indian Reservation as Memory 283
- Chapter Fourteen Tribal Capitalism and Native Capitalists: Multiple Pathways of Native Economy 308
- Chapter Fifteen Conclusion 330
- About the Contributors 335
- Index 341