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Academic literature on the topic 'Iroquois (Indiens) – Relations avec l'État'
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Iroquois (Indiens) – Relations avec l'État"
Beaulieu, Alain. "Ne faire qu'un seul peuple? : Iroquois et Français à l'"âge héroïque" de la Nouvelle-France (1600-1660)." Doctoral thesis, Université Laval, 1992. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/23872.
Full textMorin, Maxime. "Le rôle politique des abbés Pierre Maillard, Jean-Louis Le Loutre et François Picquet dans les relations franco-amérindiennes à la fin du Régime français (1734-1763)." Thesis, Université Laval, 2009. http://www.theses.ulaval.ca/2009/26720/26720.pdf.
Full textTremblay, Jean-François. "Analyse structurale des relations de pouvoir entre acteurs, le cas des Atikamekw, des Montagnais et des gouvernements." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 2000. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk2/ftp02/NQ51273.pdf.
Full textGrienenberger, Gilles. "Anthropologie des pratiques politiques Mohawks de Kahnawake, Canada : pouvoir, identités, subjectivations." Thesis, Strasbourg, 2016. http://www.theses.fr/2016STRAG044.
Full textIn this thesis, we propose a study of political phenomena in the mohawk reservation of Kahnawake in Canada. We base our interrogation on data crossed between symbolism and praxis, the perceived and the experienced and the pragmatic dimensions supported by different aspects of material culture. This project of political anthropology which makes ontologies, subjectification phenomena and practices the central theme of its research, invites us to invest normative and ideational frameworks as much as the structural dynamics that animate the community and its different institutions. We wish to detach ourselves from studies that base themselves on paradigms built from such antagonistic dyads as tradition/modernity, authenticity/rupture, etc. Furthermore, we have broken off from works that essentially point to the functional aspects of the political and the institutional. In closely tightening up this vast ensemble that embraces a variety of fields, we postulate the existence of a coherent social, political and spiritual mechanism, able to espouse the irregular curves of this population’s life, marked by the sharp angles drawn by colonization and its consequences
Gagnon, Mathieu. "Enquête morale sur le mépris envers les premières nations : le programme de conversion des Jésuites en Huronie au 17e siècle et le programme de civilisation britanno-canadien au 19e siècle." Thesis, Université Laval, 2011. http://www.theses.ulaval.ca/2011/28103/28103.pdf.
Full textMartinat, Françoise. "Les stratégies politiques et juridiques des leaders indigènes de la Colombie et du Venezuela." Lille 2, 2003. http://books.openedition.org/septentrion/16233.
Full textAccepting that indigenous peoples from Colombia and Venezuela have constitutional rights deeply modifies the relations established between the State, the civil society and the indigenous peoples. The relations of domination give now way to a more complex situation between the different actors. This thesis will focus on two aspects. On the one hand, it will prove that the Constitution has become a strategic weapon in the politic and ethnic demands of the natives. On the other hand, it will show how the Constitution is a source of different interpretations which are dynamic though space and time. Focusing on tactics, political and juridical strategies of the different actors, it is now possible to give a new significance to " politics of recognition " (or " politics of difference ") and to the multiculturalism which these are connected with. Recognizing the ethnic and cultural diversity allows us to give a new meaning to the reform process of the State and to the democratic strengthening observed in Colombia and Venezuela
Sepúlveda, Bastien. "Les Mapuches du Chili : des représentations aux pratiques de l'espace : géographie(s) d'un territoire autochtone." Rouen, 2011. http://www.theses.fr/2011ROUEL014.
Full textBased on the investigation conducted in the mapuche land in Chile, this Ph. D proposes a geographical approach of the indigenous question and its resurgence in the latin-american public sphere. It brings about the different ways of questioning State to which indian leaders claim their ancestral territories. Discourses about territory and its representations are being examinated through the deconstruction of a geographical imaginary rooted in rural and traditional communities idealized as the reproduction place of a frozen culture. Based on the field work carried out in both the rural communities and urban areas towards migration process is going on, this Ph. D demonstrates the gap between proclaimed and experienced territorialities. An explanation can be found in the influence exerted by the State in the ways of conceiving and representing territory in a contemporary colonial context. Finally, this Ph. D attempts to reveal that multiple readings of a same space are working out to set down the bases of a geography of mapuche territory
Shields, Norman D. "Anishinabek political alliance in the post-Confederation period, the Grand General Indian Council of Ontario, 1870-1936." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 2001. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk3/ftp05/MQ63366.pdf.
Full textCapitaine, Brieg. "Autochtonie et modernité : l'expérience des Innus au Canada." Paris, EHESS, 2012. http://www.theses.fr/2012EHES0122.
Full textThe concept of modernity is intrinsically based on a break marking the boundary between modern society and the past. Indigenous peoples thus represent a real test case for social scientists who were able to observe in situ the multiple facets of the advent of a world that promised much freedom and progress but also uncertainty and lack of freedom. How do indigenous peoples experience modernity and what meaning do they give to their actions? This thesis is based on the ethnography of two Innu reserves in Quebec, more than thirty semi-structured interviews with actors of both communities, and an analysis of American Indian politics, legal documents and newspaper articles. This thesis focuses on the individuals without neglecting the forms of power that influence them, and explores the tension that indigenous societies experience in the creation of modern societies. While for over thirty years, the Innu fought for freedom and resisted the Canadian state, their actions also contributed to their confinement in a collective identity of victimization. This paradox inherent to the the indigenous movement took not the downfall of the Canadian nation-state, but rather one of the actors in its resurgence. Finally, aside from some political action that has been deemed destructive, certain individuals have taken it upon themselves to create a society that is no longer determined by the rules of the existing social system, but is a product of the identity of those at «the bottom». In conclusion, this thesis explores, through the double analysis of the subjectification by freedom, and of the political action for freedom, the tension that characterizes indigenous modernity
Bédard, Hélène. "Les Montagnais et la réserve de Betsiamites, 1850-1900." Master's thesis, Université Laval, 1987. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/29283.
Full textBooks on the topic "Iroquois (Indiens) – Relations avec l'État"
University of Saskatchewan. Native Law Centre., ed. Children or brethren: Aboriginal rights in colonial Iroquoia. Saskatoon: University of Saskatchewan, Native Law Centre, 1985.
Find full textGilkison, J. T. Visit of the governor-general and the Countess of Dufferin to the Six Nation Indians: August 25, 1874. 2nd ed. [S.l: s.n.], 2003.
Find full text1967-, Havard Gilles, Musée McCord d'histoire canadienne, and Recherches amérindiennes au Québec (Association), eds. Montréal, 1701: Planter l'arbre de paix. Montréal, Qué: Recherches amérindiennes au Québec, 2001.
Find full text1954-, Viau Roland, and Back Francis, eds. La Grande Paix: Chronique d'une saga diplomatique. Montréal, Qué: Libre expression, 2001.
Find full textMontreal, 1701: Planting the tree of peace. Montreal: Recherches amérindiennes au Québec, 2001.
Find full textThe Great Peace of Montreal of 1701: French-native diplomacy in the seventeenth century. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press, 2001.
Find full textCanada. Affaires indiennes et du Nord Canada. Traités de l'Ontario. Ottawa, Ont: Affaires indiennes et du Nord Canada, 2000.
Find full textProvost, Honorius. Les Abénaquis du Canada et le pouvoir civil. Québec, Qué: Société historique de Québec, 1985.
Find full textCanada. Commission des revendications des Indiens. Enquête sur la revendication de la Première Nation d'Eel River Bar concernant le barrage de la rivière Eel. Ottawa, Ont: Commission des revendications des Indiens, 1997.
Find full textAllain, Jane. Les droits des autochtones. Ottawa, Ont: Bibliothèque du Parlement, Service de recherche, 1996.
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