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+====The aff’s attempt to group all indigenous nations into one people ignores their individuality and their varying responses to US influences. Fiating that every tribe does the plan ignores the complexities of tribe politics while re-entrenching the government oppression the aff seeks to solve. Turns case. ==== |
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+Champagne 16 |
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+Duane Champagne is Professor of Sociology and American Indian Studies at UCLA, and Professor of Law at UCLA School of Law. He earned his B.A. in Mathematics from North Dakota State University in 1973, his M.A. from North Dakota State University in 1975, and his Ph.D. in Sociology from Harvard in 1982. He is currently a member of the Faculty Advisory Committee for the UCLA Native Nations Law and Policy Center, and is Acting Director of the UCLA School of Law’s Tribal Learning Community and Educational Exchange (TLCEE). Professor Champagne served previously as the Director of the UCLA American Indian Studies Center from 1991-2002 and as editor of the American Indian Culture and Research Journal from 1986-2003. He has authored or edited over one hundred publications including Native America: Portraits of the Peoples, The Native North American Almanac, and Social Order and Political Change: Constitutional Governments Among the Cherokee, Choctaw, Chickasaw and Creek. |
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+Indigenous nations are …diverse indigenous nations. |
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+====Trying to solve "environmental racism" assumes the Natives are too simple and ignorant to speak for themselves – it re-inscribes the very thought that led to the fifteenth century domination and eradication of the natives – turns the case. Gover and Walker 92:==== |
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+KEVIN GOVER* AND JANA L. WALKER** (artner, Gover, Stetson and Williams, P.C., Albuquerque, New Mexico. and Associate, Gover, Stetson and Willims, P.C., Albuquerque, New Mexico)."ESCAPING ENVIRONMENTAL PATERNALISM: ONE TRIBE'S APPROACH TO DEVELOPING A COMMERCIAL WASTE DISPOSAL PROJECT IN INDIAN COUNTRY" WP |
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+Tribes also have…Parts Of this country. |
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+====The US ought to allow Indigeous groups ought to decide for themselves. A plurinational approach allows Indigenous tribes to make specific decisions for their individual cultures about whether or not to allow resource extraction or development projects. ==== |
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+**Champagne 16 |
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+**Duane Champagne is Professor of Sociology and American Indian Studies at UCLA, and Professor of Law at UCLA School of Law. He earned his B.A. in Mathematics from North Dakota State University in 1973, his M.A. from North Dakota State University in 1975, and his Ph.D. in Sociology from Harvard in 1982. He is currently a member of the Faculty Advisory Committee for the UCLA Native Nations Law and Policy Center, and is Acting Director of the UCLA School of Law’s Tribal Learning Community and Educational Exchange (TLCEE). Professor Champagne served previously as the Director of the UCLA American Indian Studies Center from 1991-2002 and as editor of the American Indian Culture and Research Journal from 1986-2003. He has authored or edited over one hundred publications including Native America: Portraits of the Peoples, The Native North American Almanac, and Social Order and Political Change: Constitutional Governments Among the Cherokee, Choctaw, Chickasaw and Creek. |
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+What Indigenous Peoples …specific Indigenous Peoples. |