Note:This thesis isolates four distinct patterns of production in the economic history of the Ahtna Athabascan Indians of the Upper Copper Valley, Alaska in the period from the 1700's to 1974: the aboriginal period of production for use and the periods dominated by mercantile capitalism; monopoly capitalism; and state capitalism. The period of mercantile capitalism involved the introduction of commodity fur production and the beginnings of a dependence upon commodities used as the means of subsistence production. The period of monopoly capitalism involved the introduction of wage labour and a fuller dependence upon commodities as the means of subsistence production. The period of state capitalism involved a fuller dependence upon wage labou...
Note:This thesis deals with change in Cumberland Sound, Northwest Territories, focussing on the peri...
ABSTRACT. A habitation site at Healy Lake in eastern Alaska was occupied by Alaskan Natives more or ...
Alaska Natives have experienced less than ideal conditions for engaging in management of their homel...
Note:This thesis analyzes the consequences for the domestic mode of production of the Cree-Montagnai...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2013On the coasts of the United States, dense human pop...
Historical scholarship on American Alaska has largely framed its colonization as settlers chasing th...
Cet article concerne la transition vers le capitalisme par un groupe de leaders autochtones de l’Ala...
This study explores the relationship between social organization and economic arrangements among Nor...
The Iñupiat communities of Point Barrow, Alaska can trace their lineage back to some of the earliest...
Mineral development has a long history of occurring in the territory of Indigenous communities. In C...
This thesis looks at the relevance of ideology to the emergence of capitalist social formation in Ru...
ABSTRACT. It is demonstrated that while it is difficult to arrive directly at values for the product...
This thesis explores how the Iñupiat of the North Slope of Alaska have responded to cultural pressur...
The subject of this paper is the subjugation of. native (Indian and Half-breed) women in northern an...
This thesis explores how the Iñupiat of the North Slope of Alaska have responded to cultural pressur...
Note:This thesis deals with change in Cumberland Sound, Northwest Territories, focussing on the peri...
ABSTRACT. A habitation site at Healy Lake in eastern Alaska was occupied by Alaskan Natives more or ...
Alaska Natives have experienced less than ideal conditions for engaging in management of their homel...
Note:This thesis analyzes the consequences for the domestic mode of production of the Cree-Montagnai...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2013On the coasts of the United States, dense human pop...
Historical scholarship on American Alaska has largely framed its colonization as settlers chasing th...
Cet article concerne la transition vers le capitalisme par un groupe de leaders autochtones de l’Ala...
This study explores the relationship between social organization and economic arrangements among Nor...
The Iñupiat communities of Point Barrow, Alaska can trace their lineage back to some of the earliest...
Mineral development has a long history of occurring in the territory of Indigenous communities. In C...
This thesis looks at the relevance of ideology to the emergence of capitalist social formation in Ru...
ABSTRACT. It is demonstrated that while it is difficult to arrive directly at values for the product...
This thesis explores how the Iñupiat of the North Slope of Alaska have responded to cultural pressur...
The subject of this paper is the subjugation of. native (Indian and Half-breed) women in northern an...
This thesis explores how the Iñupiat of the North Slope of Alaska have responded to cultural pressur...
Note:This thesis deals with change in Cumberland Sound, Northwest Territories, focussing on the peri...
ABSTRACT. A habitation site at Healy Lake in eastern Alaska was occupied by Alaskan Natives more or ...
Alaska Natives have experienced less than ideal conditions for engaging in management of their homel...