Title: Reimagining Cooperative Research Futures
1Re-imagining Co-operative Research Futures
- Dr. Isobel M. Findlay
- Mapping Co-operative Studies in the New
Millennium - University of Victoria, May 2003
2Situating Knowledge
- Theory is always a (necessary) detour on the way
to something more important.--Hall, 1991 - Communication is a symbolic process whereby
reality is produced, maintained, repaired, and
transformed. . . . Communication . . . Produces
the social bonds . . . That tie men sic
together and make associated life
possible.Carey, 1992 - The fundamental issue is the identity of the
decision-maker. . . . the courts of the
colonizer have assumed the authority to define
the nature and meaning of Aboriginal cultures. - R Barsh and J Henderson, 1997 1102
3Re-imagining Co-operative Research Futures
- Researching back (Smith, 1999)
- Enriching discursive practice
- Investing in revisionary theory and history
- Including diverse voices
- Adding values
4Key Operating Assumptions
- Research is neither natural nor neutral.
- Meanings and identities are not out there waiting
to be discovered but are actively produced and
reproduced. - Constructions of cultural gaps between
academics and activists, between theory and
practice, between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal
peoples are products of dominant institutions and
discourses. - Common sense views operate as barriers to
productive relations and change.
5Revisiting Co-operation
- Co-operation as theme and theory
- Co-operation as a practice with a history
- Co-operation as agent and object of decolonizing
- Co-operative intellectual as change agent
- Co-operation as decolonizing a colonial legacy
that has taught us how to value difference, how
to fragment, how to reproduce hierarchy
6Globalization
- justificatory myth acting as the main weapon
in the battles against the gains of the welfare
state and neo-liberalisms very smart and very
modern repackaging of the oldest ideas of the
oldest capitalists while dismissing progressive
thought and action as archaicBourdieu, 1998 - Dangers of becoming another name for aggravated
inequality--Paul Martin - Growing disparity in social health indicators
between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal populations
in Canada.
7Neo-liberalism and neo-colonialism
- Obliterating the public in the public good
- new individualism Bill Turner, 2002
- Corporate appropriations of discourses of
cooperation and diversity - Recuperation of empire in mainstream
historiographyCannadine, Ornamentalism, 2001
Niall Ferguson, Empire, 2003 Linda Colley,
Captives, 2002 - First Nations Governance Act and government
policy of wilful forgetting of foundational
irrationalities of colonial dispossession
8On Postmodern Impossibility
- Our current ideologies . . . use expert argument
to turn almost any form of injustice into an
inevitability.J. R. Saul, 1994 - The Cult of Impotence Selling the Myth of
Powerlessness in the Global Economy.McQuaig,1998 - The cult of transgression without risk leading
to cynicism as one of the Fine Arts.Bourdieu,
1998
9Postcolonialism
- expands contexts/histories
- unpacks oppressive universals
- commits to agency, accountability,
social/political action - recenters marginalized knowledge
- revalues postcolonial subject (not as object of
expert or imperial gaze)
10On Re-imagining Possibilities
- Current era as a site of rupture of old
discursive regimes and hence a site of
possibilitiesMartin Nakata, 2000 - Fences and virtual fences Have always been part
of capitalism windows of dissent mean activists
take down the first fenceson the streets and in
their mindsKlein, 2002
11Ovide Mercredi, May 2003
- Respond to the challenge to make universities
relevant to his community. - Reconsider what parliamentary democracy has meant
for Aboriginal peoples in Canada. - Move from knowledge products and self-centred
champions of knowledge to ways of knowing. - The world of interdependency is here to stay.
12Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond, May 2003
- Value the difference that difference makes.
- Remove the barriers to credibility and capacity.
- Listen to the traumatized peoples and their
stories. - Disrupt the neat categories of justice.
13Pierre Bourdieu, 1998
- Collective, critical, and committed intellectuals
winning back democracy from technocracy by
unpacking economic and other necessities and
hence neutralizing the effects of forbidding
fatalism. - a new and critical internationalism and an
economics of happiness to counter cruder
cost-benefit analyses. - Cooperatives as institutions capable of
obstructing the logic of the pure market.
14Hardt and Negri, 2000
- Cooperation as a means of organizing political
space against Empire in its currently globalizing
character. - Militants resist imperial command in a creative
way. In other words, resistance is linked
immediately with a constitutive investment in a
biopolitical realm and to the formation of
cooperative apparatuses of production and
community.
15Indigenous Humanities
- a strategic labelling of actively produced and
respectfully disseminated knowledges - unapologetically hybrid, collaborative, and
interdisciplinary - catachresis, category mistake, or misnaming such
as Gayatri Spivak welcomes as the limit of
authority and the place of progressive change
16Indigenous Humanities
- unpacks the complicity of the traditional
humanities in history of colonialism - rereads treaties, cultural, legal, and historical
texts - revalues Aboriginal knowledge and heritage
- makes inquiry more relational, sociable, modest
17Indigenous Humanities
- Resists the individualizing, personalizing, and
feminizing of cultural sensitivity training - Refuses to reproduce colonial categories of
identity - Retells the histories of colonialism and roles of
law, religion, and education in producing and
reproducing inequities - uses multiple strategies in multiple sites
18David Newhouse, 2002
- Deconstruct the view that everything modern -
capitalism, markets, individuals as free and
equal consumers - will always and everywhere
bring progress while everything traditional
brings backwardness. - Build on Aboriginal understandings of progress,
society, the economy, and the relationship of the
individual to the collective.
19Wanda Wuttunee, 2002
- We can all be economic warriors.
- Think about the costs of relying on mainstream
business only. - Think of the children when making economic
decisions. - Understand our history, embrace all of our
strengths, move to stronger relationships with
our neighbours. - Give the gifts of hope, strength and love.
20James (Sakej) Youngblood Henderson, 2002
- Understand split-head society
- Aboriginal soul and Eurocentric head
- Restructure and rethink Canada and reinvent the
constitution - Rediscover and unleash economic potential of
treaty economy - Build Aboriginal think tanks
21Marie Battiste, 2002
- We are all marinated in Eurocentrism
- Education is foundation of transforming agenda
- RCAP is a postcolonial agenda
- The postcolonial is an act of hope
- rethink boundaries and retell stories
- Aboriginal regulatory frameworks and respectful
dialogue are critical - Imagine, dream, create, celebrate together
22From Many Peoples, Strength
- To neglect the past is to postpone the future
(Ndebele, 1994). - Disinterested expertise repeats colonialisms
perverse logic that distorts, disfigures, and
destroys the past of oppressed peoples (Fanon,
1968)
23Power of Education/Communication
- RCAP (1996) stressed the central role of
communications in building community cohesiveness
within Aboriginal nations and fostering
relationships between cultures. . . .
Communication is much more than a cultural glue .
. . . We actually construct who we are ( Vol. 3
620-21)
24Transforming/Sharing Tools
- Recovering Canada with John Borrows and his
Declaration of Interdependence - Reframing the terms of intercultural relations
- Renewing with Georges Erasmus relationship
between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal peoples in
Canada - From aboriginal rights to relationship between
peoples - From crying needs to vigorous capacity
- From individual citizenship to nations within the
nation state
25From Many Peoples, Strength
- Rebuilding community means sharing the
definitional power (Monture-Angus, 1995). - Rewriting discourses and curricula remakes
meanings and relationships. - Re-imagining co-operative research futures takes
critical engagement, commitment, and coalition.