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    A politics that categorically refuses external recognitio... — Carmelics
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    Challenges→Indigenous peoples should redirect struggles toward a resurgent politics of recognition premised on self-actualization rather than seeking settler-state recognition.

    A politics that categorically refuses external recognition may reproduce the isolation that historically weakened Indigenous collective bargaining power against state encroachment.

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    Key Terms

    Indigenous(as used in discussions of land rights and justice)
    People who are the original inhabitants of a place, particularly referring to native peoples who lived in an area before colonization or conquest.
    categorical refusal(describing a political stance)
    An absolute, no-exceptions rejection of something, without any flexibility or compromise.
    collective bargaining power(in Indigenous-state relations)
    The strength that a group has when it negotiates together as one unit, rather than individuals negotiating separately.
    external recognition(in Indigenous political strategy)
    Acknowledgment or approval from outside groups or authorities (like governments or international bodies), rather than self-determination alone.
    state encroachment

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    (describing government expansion into Indigenous territories)
    When a government gradually takes control over or invades areas of life or land that weren't previously under its authority.

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    Democracy & Governance1 linkedRights & Liberty1 linked

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    Indigenous peoples should redirect struggles toward a resurgent politics of reco...

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