Victims of Progress 6/e


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By John H. Bodley
Imprint: ROWMAN & LITTLEFIELD PUBLISHERS
Release Date:
Format:
PAPERBACK
Pages:
410

Description

John H. Bodley is Regents Professor Emeritus at Washington State University. His numerous publications include The Power of Scale (2003), Anthropology and Contemporary Human Problems (Sixth Edition, 2012), Cultural Anthropology: Tribes, States, and the Global System (Fifth Edition, 2011) and The Small Nation Solution (2013).


Preface and Acknowledgments

1: Introduction: Indigenous Peoples and Culture Scale

Culture Scale, Culture Process, and Indigenous Peoples

Large-Scale versus Small-Scale

Society and Culture

The Problem of Global-Scale Society and Culture

Social Scale and Social Power

Negative Development: The Global Pattern

Policy Implications

2: Progress and Indigenous Peoples

Progress: The Commercial Explosion

The Culture of Consumption

Resource Appropriation and Acculturation

The Role of Ethnocentrism Civilization’s Unwilling Conscripts Cultural Pride versus Progress The Principle of Stabilization

3: The Uncontrolled Frontier

The Frontier Process

Demographic Impact of the Frontier

4: We Fought with Spears

The Punitive Raid

Wars of Extermination

5: The Extension of Government Control

Aims and Philosophy of Administration

Tribal Peoples and National Unity

The Transfer of Sovereignty

Treaty Making

Bringing Government to the Tribes

The Political Integration Process

Anthropology and Native Administration

6: Land Policies

The People–Land Relationship

Land Policy Variables

7: Cultural Modification Policies

These Are the Things That Obstruct Progress

Social Engineering: How to Do It

8: Economic Globalization

Forced Labor: Harnessing the Heathens

Learning the Dignity of Labor: Taxes and Discipline

Creating Progressive Consumers

Promoting Technological Change

Tourism and Indigenous Peoples

9: The Price of Progress

Progress and the Quality of Life

Diseases of Development

Ecocide

Deprivation and Discrimination

10: The Political Struggle for Indigenous Self-Determination

Who Are Indigenous Peoples?

The Initial Political Movements

Creating Nunavut

Guna Self-Determination: The Comarca Gunayala

The Political Struggle

The Shuar Solution

CONAIE: Uprising Politics Reshaping Ecuador’s Political Landscape

The Dene Nation: Land, Not Money

Land Rights and the Outstation Movement in Australia

Philippine Tribals: No More Retreat

Indigenous Peoples and the Arctic Council

The United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples

Tebtebba: An Indigenous Partnership on Climate Change and Forests

11: Petroleum, the Commercial World, and Indigenous Peoples

Petroleum: The Unsustainable Foundation of the Commercial World

The Gwich’in and Oil Development in the Sacred Place Where Life Begins

Petroleum Development and Indigenous Rights in Ecuador

First Nations Opposition to Canadian Tar Sand Development

Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation (ACFN) vs. Shell Oil

Assigning Responsibility for Tar Sand Development

12: Global Warming and Indigenous Peoples

The Indigenous Response to Global Warming

Indigenous Peoples as Climate Change Refugees

Arctic Warming and Alaska Natives

Global Warming Perpetuators and Beneficiaries

Assessing the Global Costs of Climate Change & the Carbon Economy

13: Human Rights and the Politics of Ethnocide

The Realists: Humanitarian Imperialists and Scientists

The World Bank: Operational Manual 2005 and False Assurances

The Idealist Preservationists

You Can’t Leave Them Alone: The Realists Prevail

Indigenous Peoples’ Rights Advocates

Voluntary Isolation in the Twenty-First Century

Indigenous Peoples as Small Nations

Conclusion

Appendixes

Bibliography

Index

About the Author


Reviews

In this latest edition Bodley surveys the conditions of indigenous peoples in a wide range of places and times. As in earlier editions, in the first two-thirds of the book, the author reviews the conflicts at contact between Native peoples and colonizing Europeans and Americans. The theme is twofold: constantly changing boundaries were unable to keep the two peoples apart and at peace, but the resilience of indigenous societies in the face of decimating disease, land loss, and deforestation saw them through to a time when their rights and interests could garner somewhat greater international concern. Thus, the most recent chapters follow the course of UN and International Labour Organization conventions, national treaties, and the effects of global climate change and commercial contact to give a fuller picture of the current state of indigenous interests and situations. Brief yet striking examples from a wide variety of groups result in a very useful overview with enough specifics to keep the analysis from becoming too generalized. Useful for anthropology and public policy collections and courses, particularly when supplemented with more-detailed accounts and visual aids. Summing Up: Recommended. General university and high school libraries.

— Choice Reviews



Victims of Progress appears in its sixth updated edition to consider, as an ongoing project, how technology is affecting indigenous peoples around the world, and is recommended for college-level collections strong in anthropology as well as global social issues and cultural studies. It considers the histories of struggles between small-scale indigenous communities and colonists and developers, examines intervention techniques, and posits the theory that these small-scale communities have done a good job in contemporary times of organizing as a political force to defend their territories, lifestyles, and interests. This sixth edition holds expanded discussions of both rebellions and deliberate isolationist tactics, and adds further details on the costs and threats posed to such communities by global warming. No global issues collection should be without this solid reference.

— Midwest Book Review



Essential for its scope, detailed analysis, and documentary rigor, the sixth edition of Victims of Progress is an exceptionally learned and uncompromising critique of the neocolonial expansion of capitalist market economy into indigenous peoples’ homelands. Bodley’s updated classic is both an indictment of Euro-American aggressive world expansion and a eulogy of Native civilizations and their wisdom.

— Stefano Varese, professor emeritus, University of California, Davis



A must-read… Through its clear arguments and abundant case materials, the sixth edition of Victims of Progress shows how far humans have come in mitigating the damage of an expanding commercial world—where tribal peoples were merely the first to suffer—and in defending our rights to exist as ourselves. It is a book not only of human tragedies, but also of human strengths. Useful in courses on culture change, modernization, and economic development.

— Pasang Yangjee Sherpa, Penn State University





Victims of Progress reveals the political and ethnocentric nature of development in the name of progress and contradicts the justification of inevitable ethnocide, genocide, and ecocide found around the world and throughout time. A must-read for anyone interested in models of success based on demonstrated resiliency and dedication of small-scale peoples fighting for autonomy and sovereignty.

— Kerensa Allison, Lewis-Clark State College



This unparalleled survey is an in depth analysis of the problems of survival, adaptation, and human rights faced by indigenous peoples the world over. From the imposition of external economic and political forces to colonialism to globalization, the sixth edition of Bodley’s Victims of Progress covers a wide range of topics. This should be required reading for every student and professional in anthropology.

— Leslie Sponsel, University of Hawai`i, author of Spiritual Ecology: A Quiet Revolution



A beautifully written account of the tragic plight of indigenous peoples under the impact of technological and economic ‘progress’ of industrial nation-states over many centuries. Bodley’s analysis skillfully combines quantitative data with qualitative assessments to illuminate global issues affecting us all. The book is a must for anyone concerned with issues of genocide, environmental destruction, and human rights. Thoroughly up-dated, this sixth edition will be a valuable asset in undergraduate and graduate courses alike.

— Linda Stone, professor emeritus, Washington State University


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