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Research Articles

Weaponizing traditions: Threads of resistance and oppression

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Pages 172-189 | Published online: 13 Oct 2020
 

Abstract

Within Indigenous communities, how do emerging Indigenous leaders experience resistance? This article discusses responses to this guiding research question within the multi-directional oppression Indigenous peoples experience in their communities as public administrators. Using an Indigenous Knowledge framework that is deeply based in grounded theory, we hosted listening circles to create a space for emerging Indigenous leaders to talk and hear each other in a Longhouse at The Evergreen State College. The listening circle contributors are mainly emerging leaders and tribal members from Native nations across the Salish Sea. They talked together to unravel the implications outsider and insider colonization has had on the community relations that exist today. This research focused solely on the perpetration of colonization tactics that use cultural traditions as a weapon to oppress rather than enliven. Rather than European colonization, internalized Indigenous colonization was often discussed from Indigenous person to person and distinct groups within Indigenous communities to other groups. Through exploring present day weaponized tradition, we work to heal through an Indigenous meta-narrative of lived experiences thereby removing Indigenous peoples from the classification of “other” or “erased.”

Acknowledgement

Much respect and gratitude to those we were honored to sit with, listen to, and stand alongside.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Amy Gould

I am Amy Gould. I'm passionate about the intersections of identity and conformity, cultural norms, Indigeneity, positionality, and postcolonial feminism. My Ph.D. is in Political Science with areas of emphasis in Public Administration, International Relations, Gender, and Development. I'm a non-Native ally. Contact Info: Name: Amy Gould, Ph.D., Affiliation: The Evergreen State College, Email address: [email protected], Physical mailing address: 2700 Evergreen Parkway NW, Olympia, WA 98505, USA.

Kayla Kuboyama

I am Kayla Kuboyama of the Mahi family from Maui. I am Kanaka Maoli. My studies and areas of interest focus on Indigenous peoples, community relations, and equitable philanthropy. In 2018, I received an MPA with a concentration in Tribal Governance from The Evergreen State College. Contact Info: Kayla Kuboyama, MPA, Indigenous Affiliation: Kanaka Maoli (Hawaiian), Email Address: [email protected], Physical Mailing Address: 9411 56th Ave SW, APT MM101, Lakewood, WA 98499, USA

This article is part of the following collections:
Administrative Theory & Praxis Outstanding Article Award

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