SOAN 230

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Indigenous Peoples: Alternative Political Economies

Sociology and Anthropology Undergraduate PUGET - Puget Sound

Course Description

This course examines the situations, problems, and continually developing strategies of indigenous peoples living in various countries and regions scattered throughout the world. While the central concern of this investigation focuses on so-called "tribal" peoples and their increasingly threatened, yet still instructive lifeways, the course also deliberately considers selected points of contrast and comparison involving "modern" societies as well. Toward this end, the course uses the approach of political anthropology, which has traditionally been associated with the study of small-scale societies (wherein the realms of "politics" and "economics" are inseparably interlinked with other sociocultural institutions such as "religion" and "kinship"). The ultimate aim of the course is threefold: first, to acknowledge the tragedy of past and presently-continuing destruction of indigenous peoples' physical, social, and cultural lives; second, to learn about and from the resilience and resistance such people have shown over millennia; and third, to inspire hope that it is still not too late for "modern" and "tribal" people humbly and profitably to learn from each other.

Course Typically Offered

Offered occasionally.

Career

Undergraduate

Catalog Course Attributes

CO24 - SOCSCI (Social Sci and Historical), CORE - SL (Social Scientific Approaches), INTD - AFAM (African American Studies AFAM), INTD - EPDM (Env Pol & Decision EPDM ENVR), INTD - GDS (Global Development Studies GDS), INTD - SOAN (Sociology & Anthropology SOAN), INTD - IPE (International Pol Economy IPE)

Min Units

1

Max Units

1

Name

Lecture

Optional Component

No

Final Exam Type

Yes