Makúk : a new history of Aboriginal-white relations /
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Author / Creator: | Lutz, John S. (John Sutton), 1959- |
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Imprint: | Vancouver : UBC Press, c2008. |
Description: | xii, 431 p. : ill., maps, ports. ; 27 cm. |
Language: | English |
Subject: | |
Format: | E-Resource Print Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/7196543 |
Summary: | John Lutz traces Aboriginal people's involvement in the new economy, and their displacement from it, from the arrival of the first Europeans to the 1970s. Drawing on an extensive array of oral histories, manuscripts, newspaper accounts, biographies, and statistical analysis, Lutz shows that Aboriginal people flocked to the workforce and prospered in the late nineteenth century. He argues that the roots of today's widespread unemployment and "welfare dependency" date only from the 1950s, when deliberate and inadvertent policy choices - what Lutz terms the "white problem" drove Aboriginal people out of the capitalist, wage, and subsistence economies, offering them welfare as "compensation." |
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Physical Description: | xii, 431 p. : ill., maps, ports. ; 27 cm. |
Bibliography: | Includes bibliographical references (p. [380]-401) and index. |
ISBN: | 9780774811392 0774811390 9780774811408 0774811404 |