05903nam 22005895 450 991025512060332120230208143011.094-6351-014-110.1007/978-94-6351-014-1(CKB)3710000001404878(DE-He213)978-94-6351-014-1(OCoLC)990046866(nllekb)BRILL9789463510141(MiAaPQ)EBC4878048(EXLCZ)99371000000140487820170609d2017 uy 0engurnn#008mamaatxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierIndigenous innovations in higher education local knowledge and critical research /edited by Elizabeth Sumida Huaman and Bryan McKinley Jones Brayboy1st ed. 2017.Rotterdam :Sense Publishers,[2017].©20171 online resource (xx, 224 pages) illustrationsAdvances in innovation education ;volume 494-6351-013-3 94-6351-012-5 Includes bibliographical references.Preliminary Material /Elizabeth Sumida Huaman and Bryan McKinley Jones Brayboy --Indigenous Peoples and Academe /Elizabeth Sumida Huaman and Bryan McKinley Jones Brayboy --Stories of Place and Intergenerational Learning /Tessie Naranjo --With Respect… /Anya Dozier Enos --Using a Pueblo Chthonic Lens to Examine the Impacts of Spanish Colonialism on New Mexico Pueblos /June L. Lorenzo --Research Is a Pebble in My Shoe /Michele Suina --(Re)Claiming Tewa/Pueblo Sovereignty through (Re)Search and the Development of the A’gin Healthy Sexuality and Body Sovereignty Project /Corrine Sanchez --Rethinking Data through Pueblo Interpretations /Richard Luarkie --Reconsidering Pueblo Economic Development and Citizenship /Shawn Abeita --Attaching Your Heart /Carnell T. Chosa --The Foundations of Pueblo Indian Consciousness /Anthony Dorame --Indigenous Ecological Survivance /Mark Ericson --Concluding Thoughts /Elizabeth Sumida Huaman and Bryan McKinley Jones Brayboy --About the Contributors /Elizabeth Sumida Huaman and Bryan McKinley Jones Brayboy.This edited volume is the result of a collaborative project of Indigenous graduate education training and higher education-tribal institution partnerships in the southwestern United States. We feature the work of interdisciplinary scholars writing about local peoples, issues, and knowledges that demonstrate rich linkages between universities and Indigenous communities. Collectively, as Indigenous peoples writing, this work takes the opportunity to explore why and how Indigenous peoples are working to reframe dominant limits of our power and to shift educational efforts from the colonial back to an Indigenous center. These efforts reflect a conscientious practice to maintain Indigenous worldviews through diverse yet unified approaches aimed at serving Indigenous peoples and places. “The luminous Indigenous scholarship contained here comes to us as a rare gift. The voices of Pueblo intellectuals speak to the profoundly innovative Indigenous doctoral cohort model they co-developed with Liz Sumida Huaman and Bryan Brayboy of Arizona State University. They also instruct us in the richness of their contemporary, community-based research, rooted in the ‘creative genius of our ancestors,’ as Karuk scholar Julian Lang evocatively described Indigenous epistemologies.” – K. Tsianina Lomawaima, Professor & Distinguished Scholar of Indigenous Education, School of Social Transformation, Arizona State University “The editors and writers reveal identity and sense of place as indigenous people from their own native perspectives rooted in both their spirit and in their place in the academy. As indigenous people, we strive for the academy to belong to us without the definitions and framework of colonization. This book contributes to our ownership of the academy as a place where we belong with all the knowledge of our ancestors and the promises of the future embedded in what we learn and what we teach.” – Cheryl Crazy Bull, President & CEO, American Indian College Fund “The depth and breadth of knowledge of the editors in Indigenous education and their ability to apply the knowledge to produce practical outcomes and benefits to our Indigenous communities on the ground comes through in this book. It transforms ideas into action and demonstrates the ‘blisters on the authors’ hands’ based experiences that delineate Indigenous Leaders from Indigenous Academics in my view. Indigenous Leaders enact their research into real outcomes for the people on the ground and don’t just write about the issues challenging our peoples.” – Bentham Atirau Ohia, President AMO-Advancement of Maori Opportunity & and AIO-Americans for Indian Opportunity Board member.Advances in innovation education ;v. 4.Indians of North AmericaEducation (HIgher)Indians of North AmericaStudy and teaching (Higher)EducationEducation, generalhttps://scigraph.springernature.com/ontologies/product-market-codes/O00000Southwest, NewIndians of North AmericaEducation (HIgher)Indians of North AmericaStudy and teaching (Higher)Education.Education, general.370Sumida Huaman Elizabethedthttp://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/edtBrayboy Bryan McKinleyedthttp://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/edtNL-LeKBNL-LeKBAzTeSBOOK9910255120603321Indigenous Innovations in Higher Education2494859UNINA