Indigeneity and Marginalization: Planning for and with Urban Aboriginal Communities in Canada

Argues that Aboriginal people are a unique population which has certain rights and specific needs which exist outside the standard model of multiculturalism, but traditional planning approaches have failed to take them into account. Explores urbanization and migration patterns, economic and labour force characteristics and initiatives that have attempted to improve employment, whether settlement patterns have created ghettos, measures of community, and characteristics of Aboriginal institutions.
Author/Creator
Evelyn Peters
Open Access
No
Primary Source
No
Citation
Progress in Planning, vol. 63, no. 4, May 2005, pp. 327-404
Publication Date
2005-05
Location
Resource Type
Articles -- Scholarly, peer reviewed
Format
Text -- PDF
Text -- HTML
Language
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