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Canada at a Crossroads: Boundaries, Bridges, and Laissez-Faire Racism Indigenous-Settler Relations
Barnes and Noble
Canada at a Crossroads: Boundaries, Bridges, and Laissez-Faire Racism Indigenous-Settler Relations
Current price: $45.95


Barnes and Noble
Canada at a Crossroads: Boundaries, Bridges, and Laissez-Faire Racism Indigenous-Settler Relations
Current price: $45.95
Size: Paperback
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Winner of the John Porter Tradition of Excellence Book Award,
Canada at a Crossroads
draws on group position theory, settler colonial studies, critical race theory, and Indigenous theorizing.
emphasizes the social psychological barriers to transforming white settler ideologies and practices and working towards decolonization. After tracing settlers’ sense of group superiority and entitlement to historical and ongoing colonial processes, Denis illustrates how contemporary Indigenous and settler residents think about and relate to one another. He highlights how, despite often having close cross-group relationships, residents maintain conflicting perspectives on land, culture, history, and treaties, and Indigenous residents frequently experience interpersonal and systemic racism. Denis then critically assesses the promise and pitfalls of commonly proposed solutions, including intergroup contact, education, apologies, and collective action, and concludes that genuine reconciliation will require radically restructuring Canadian society and perpetually fulfilling treaty responsibilities.
Canada at a Crossroads
draws on group position theory, settler colonial studies, critical race theory, and Indigenous theorizing.
emphasizes the social psychological barriers to transforming white settler ideologies and practices and working towards decolonization. After tracing settlers’ sense of group superiority and entitlement to historical and ongoing colonial processes, Denis illustrates how contemporary Indigenous and settler residents think about and relate to one another. He highlights how, despite often having close cross-group relationships, residents maintain conflicting perspectives on land, culture, history, and treaties, and Indigenous residents frequently experience interpersonal and systemic racism. Denis then critically assesses the promise and pitfalls of commonly proposed solutions, including intergroup contact, education, apologies, and collective action, and concludes that genuine reconciliation will require radically restructuring Canadian society and perpetually fulfilling treaty responsibilities.