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Making Space at the Nations' Table: Mapping the transformative geographies of the international indigenous peoples' movement
Authors:Alice Feldman
Affiliation:1. Department of Professional and Community Education , Goldsmiths College, University of London , London, UK;2. Goldsmiths College, University of London , London, UK;3. Department of Sociology, Centre for the Study of Race and Ethnicity , City University , London, UK;4. Department of Sociology , Centre for the Study of Race &5. Ethnicity, City University , Northampton Square, London, EC1V 0HB, UK
Abstract:

Social movement scholarship has focused increasingly upon the roles played by symbolic resources and movement discourses in the process of social transformation. Current socio-political approaches, often characterized by an excessive focus on movement structure to the exclusion of larger cultural considerations, still struggle to address adequately the process of transmutation from idea to form, from symbolic shift to material change. Through an examination of the international indigenous peoples' movement, this article illustrates the ways that space constitutes a mediating dimension of the transformative processes through which the symbolic potential of movement discourses may be manifested. The alternative spatialities and new geographies generated, deployed and legitimized by this movement have provided critical locations for indigenous peoples to enact the creative work of mobilization. It is argued that incorporating the work of critical geographers into existing sociological and political perspectives will contribute to the better apprehension of these transformative processes as well as those associated with the particularly spatialized phenomena related to globalization, development, nationalism and geopolitics.
Keywords:Indigenous Peoples  Social Movements  Politics Of Difference  Critical Geography
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