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When the North Was Red: Aboriginal Education in Soviet Siberia  (Dennis A. Bartels, Alice L. Bartels)

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When the North Was Red: Aboriginal Education in Soviet Siberia
AuthorDennis A. Bartels, Alice L. Bartels
PublisherMcgill-Queens University Press
First published1995
TypeBook
PDFhttps://annas-archive.org/md5/db60c9e759cbf420e8e741cd49aacec9


About

Early Soviet policy towards northern Native peoples was aimed at establishing Aboriginal nations that retained traditional languages and occupations and included Native peoples in Soviet institutions such as schools, collective farms, and the Communist Party. However, the success of these initiatives varied. While boarding schools provided new educational and occupational opportunities for Aboriginal peoples, traditional occupations and Native languages suffered. Focusing on the final years of the Soviet Union, the authors describe the efforts of Aboriginal political activists to address the problem of protecting Aboriginal rights in nations with large, non-Aboriginal majorities and explore whether protection of traditional cultures excludes participation in the larger society. In addressing these universal issues, When the North Was Red is relevant to all nations where Native peoples co-exist with non-Aboriginal majorities.

Interview with authors:

Part 1: https://podbay.fm/p/actually-existing-socialism/e/1655796825

Part 2: https://podbay.fm/p/actually-existing-socialism/e/1657087640

Contents