Recognition versus Self-Determination: Dilemmas of Emancipatory Politics
In: Ethnicity and Democratic Governance Series
Cover -- Contents -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Part 1: Recognition and Self-Determination -- 1 Race, Class, and Ethnicity in the History of Mexican Indigenous Politics -- 2 Recognition and Self-Determination -- 3 Two Faces of State Power -- Part 2: The Practice of Recognition and Misrecognition, Self-Determination, and Imposition -- 4 A Farewell to Rhetorical Arms? -- 5 The Politics of Recognition and Misrecognition and the Case of Muslim Canadians -- 6 Place against Empire -- 7 The Rights of Indigenous Peoples to Self-Determination and the Struggle against Cultural Appropriation -- 8 Inter-Indigenous Recognition and the Cultural Production of Indigeneity in the Western Settler States -- Part 3: Possible Ways of Reframing the Issues -- 9 Recognition, Politics of Difference, and the Institutional Identity of Peoples -- 10 Custom and Indigenous Self-Determination -- 11 The Generosity of Toleration -- 12 Self-Determination versus Recognition -- Contributors -- Index.