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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This is a 6 page paper discussing concerns and goals for the webmasters of First Nation web sites. With the introduction of globalization and increased accessibility to information technology around the world, researchers and historians have given up the idea of keeping some indigenous cultures free from outside influences. Originally the idea of indigenous peoples changing their lives to accommodate the new technologies caused a great deal of trepidation among anthropologists and native leaders, but now technology is a part of the everyday lives of native peoples, members within the First Nations are determining how best to represent themselves using Internet sites and how to differentiate their ideals from other international cultural sites. Largely, Native Americans are most interested in using their web sites to address important global, environmental and social issues which have been restricted and disregarded on larger national sites.
Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_TJFNweb1.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
idea of keeping some indigenous cultures free from outside influences. Originally the idea of indigenous peoples changing their lives to accommodate the new technologies caused a great deal of trepidation
among anthropologists and native leaders, but now technology is a part of the everyday lives of native peoples, members within the First Nations are determining how best to represent themselves
using Internet sites and how to differentiate their ideals from other international cultural sites. Largely, Native Americans are most interested in using their web sites to address important global, environmental
and social issues which have been restricted and disregarded on larger national sites. Some of the first hurdles that managers of new native Internet sites needed to overcome were the
idea of direct competition with other international and corporate sites which had a larger financial base. In the original formation of setting up their Internet sites, native representatives automatically found
that the "electronic communication systems reinforce traditional hierarchical social structures" in that corporations with more finances could provide more attractive site than many native communities with limited funds (Delgado-P. and
Becker, 1998, p. 23). This being said, how would they attract viewers to their site and how could they keep the content relevant to their mission? In addition to the
economic differences which existed within the realm of the development of the web site, indigenous communities were also aware that because of limited funding many of the people within native
communities would not be able to afford the computer equipment necessary to access the sites being developed (Delgado-P. and Becker, 1998). In an initial comparison of two national sites: the
web site of the NGC: National Geographic Society (http://www.nationalgeographic.com/); and the web site of the NAE: Native Americans and the Environment on the NCSE: National Council for Science and the
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