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Indigenous Women Essay

Decent Essays

For my research project, I plan to examine how news coverage of missing and murdered Indigenous has shifted as a result of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. Consequently, I conducted a literature review that was focused on the disproportionate levels of violence that Indigenous women in Canada face. More specifically, I was interested in the connection between news coverage, the historical and ongoing legacies of white settler colonialism, and the connection to Indigenous women’s violence. Within this literature review, a few things were startlingly clear. 1) Indigenous women’s voices about their own levels of violence are missing from the academic dialogue about this issue. 2) The ongoing and historical violence that settler colonialism …show more content…

Despite the fact that researchers have examined news coverage, the Indian Act and the historical legacies of white settler colonialism, very few addressed Indigenous resurgence movements. Many Indigenous communities do not rely on the state to protect them because they know that the police do not always in the best interests of these communities. Instead, they have created their methods of protecting their communities. These methods are within the purview of a greater Indigenous resurgence project that is occurring on Turtle Island. Therefore, how can we contextualize the role of a National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous women with subsequent Indigenous resurgence movements that no longer rely on the state for their protection? Furthermore, very little research examined the efficacy of a National Inquiry despite decades of advocating for one. Is the National Inquiry even a relevant step forward if the ultimate aim to decolonize? Can the aims of decolonization and state participation in the condemnation of Indigenous violence be …show more content…

This research is often done by settlers, who fails to clearly communicate the complexities that exist in Indigenous feminisms. There is a clear lack of Indigenous voices within this field of scholarship, which means that this scholarship lacks experiential knowledge. Furthermore, the discussions about specific women’s cases, notably that of Cindy Gladue and Tina Fontaine, has a tendency to reproduce the idea of Indigenous women as a spectacle even when the author is critiquing those very same power dynamics. These women’s violence is presented in graphic detail and recreates them as spectacles rather than serving to humanize

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