Colonization: Difference between revisions
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'''Colonization''' is a | '''Colonization''' is a the forcible imposition of a [[Regime of Accumulation]] on a formerly free population. The Regime is forcibly imposed on a population through the imposition of colonial ideologies and, when necessary, the application of violence, both positive and negative. | ||
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Latest revision as of 15:09, 29 Ocak 2024
Colonization is a the forcible imposition of a Regime of Accumulation on a formerly free population. The Regime is forcibly imposed on a population through the imposition of colonial ideologies and, when necessary, the application of violence, both positive and negative.
Related LP Terms
Colonization > Mode of Accumulation, Regime of Accumulation
Non-LP Related Terms
Notes
Colonization and Spirituality
Colonization, and later System Maintanence relies on the development and deployment of Ideological Institutions. Ideological Institutions help pacify a population by distributing Creation Templates designed to indoctrinate a population.
Colonization has "widely disrupted (and sometimes completely eradicated)" indigenous healing and spiritual traditions.[1]
Colonization has subjugated a "realm of health experience in which people's well-being depends on persistent relationships to particular landscape over time. Of special relevance to decolonization, such traditions frequently assume that much of the 'natural' world is animate and sentient, and that much of the power for maintaining human well-being depends on relationship with beings that inhabit specific places in the world." [2]
Footnotes
- ↑ Gone, Joseph P. “Decolonization as Methodological Innovation in Counseling Psychology: Method, Power, and Process in Reclaiming American Indian Therapeutic Traditions.” Journal of Counseling Psychology 68, no. 3 (2021): 259–70.
- ↑ Gone, Joseph P. “Decolonization as Methodological Innovation in Counseling Psychology: Method, Power, and Process in Reclaiming American Indian Therapeutic Traditions.” Journal of Counseling Psychology 68, no. 3 (2021): 259–70. p. 261.