02149nam 2200421 450 991043764360332120220412155226.09788281044111(PDF)9788281044128(ePUB)9788281043923(print)(CKB)4100000011758092(EXLCZ)99410000001175809220210216c20192019 uy| 0engur||#||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierRecognition, reconciliation and restoration applying a decolonized understanding in social work and healing processes /edited by Jan Erik Henriksen, Ida Hydle and Britt KramvigOrkana Forlag ASNorway :Orkana Forlag AS,2019.©20191 online resource (305 pages)Print version: 9788281043923 Includes bibliographical references.Indigenous communities worldwide are all tightly bound to nature and allfear the dramatic ruination of our planet. The scale and speed of destructionis a central concern of environmentalists and indigenous activists confronting the expanding extraction of natural resources to satisfy a global demand.Indigenous communities are participating in ongoing struggles to protect theland and traditional livelihood, and to reject neo-colonial politics. Indigenouspeople have been, and still are, central caretakers of traditional land, and ofthe securing of the biodiversity of our planet. Indigenous communities enacta worldview that is different from the dominant states and companies, andthrough this make obvious to the world its composition of many worlds (de laCadena & Blaser, 2018).Social work with indigenous peoplesElectronic books.Social work with indigenous peoples.305.8Henriksen Jan Erik Hydle IdaKramvig BrittUkMaJRUBOOK9910437643603321Recognition, reconciliation and restoration2820426UNINA