Indigenous peoples

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    racism at the core of its history. Constituting more than 60 percent of the populace, Bolivia has the largest indigenous population in the Western Hemisphere. Literally conquered by Spanish conquistadores, this indigenous population has been marginalized and discriminated against at every turn despite their majority status. Triggered by the election of South America’s first indigenous head of government, in the last decade landmark changes have taken place that have turned power over to this disenfranchised

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    Due to disassociation, assimilation, oppression, systemic and systematic erasure and violence, Indigenous peoples have been purposefully silenced at almost every moment of interaction with Canada. Many Indigenous peoples have been strategically silenced since birth. Their names were changed for number tabulations, cultures were suppressed and languages were stolen from Indigenous children and their future generations. These actions were sanctioned by the Catholic Church, manipulated by political

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    history, indigenous people have been the target of discrimination, racism, and systematic oppression. Beginning as early as 1492 when Columbus reached the Caribbean, indigenous people were either attacked, enslaved, or forced to move back to make way for European expansion, which ultimately led to the destruction of Native American livelihood. Multiple wars broke out between the Europeans and indigenous groups, like the Pequot War in 1637 and King Philip’s War in 1675. Many indigenous people were forced

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    of thousands of other Indigenous stories started during the beginnings of settler contact in the early 1400s when the explorers and colonizers evaluated and compared themselves to the Indigenous peoples of what is now known as Canada and the United States of America. Many settlers moving to Canada, were anticipating improved futures and increased well being. The oppressive and relatively definite class systems in Europe, specifically in France and Britain, forced many people into lower class labour

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    Much of the Chaco is still inhabited by indigenous people who often do not have rights to the territory they are on. Development brought on by actions from organizations like the IIRSA can be devastating to the indigenous people. Natural resource companies can displace communities. They can also harm the indigenous people by extracting resources which the indigenous rely on for their way of life. The IIRSA is attempting to boost economic development by promoting resource extraction and agriculture

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    Both wildlife animals and Indigenous people resided in Canada long before European colonization took place, and both have suffered from these invaders’ oppressive practices as a result of the dispute over territory. Because of this, many newcomers to Canada has this preconceived notion that the place is only associated with vast wilderness landscapes and that wildlife is constitutive of Canadianness (Francis 1997). This is played out in many Canadian films which portray stereotypical images of the

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    Debate Response # 2 "Do you feel the government is doing enough to address the situation of indigenous people in Canada?" The simple answer to this question is no. However, many situations, history, and aspects, acts and laws, need to be taken into consideration to have a full understanding of what the government has done and has not done to help the indigenous people in Canada. It must also be noted that many of the things the government implemented to help, actually backfired and caused more

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    everyday lives of the Indigenous people, and found that their beliefs were entirely different. As the Jesuits believed their perspective on religion and god were the only true way of looking at the world, they saw the beliefs of the Indigenous people as uniformed and less evolved. As a result, they felt it was necessary to set the Indigenous people on the proper path to true salvation which, according to the Jesuit, could not be achieved through the belief held by the Indigenous people, as they did not

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    Indigenous People In Canada

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    to define indigenous people. No philosopher has invented a holistic definition of these people of the world. However, they are those people too impoverished in all societies worldwide, reorganized by their respective societies as indigenous natives, are identified with the pre and post colonial continuity, having links with historical kingdoms and live around natural resources with a peculiar political, economic and social set up. Over seventy nations of this world habit indigenous people estimated

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    Indigenous people are the people who were on the land first, before settlers came and took it away. In this case, Americans are the settlers, and we took the Indian’s land away. We didn’t gently take their land away, we pulled the rug out from under them and stole basically all of it. We took their land by force so that we could use it for our own benefit. In result of their land being taken away, the Indians had to move. The indians had to move to from the land that they called their own. They

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