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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 6 page consideration of the question of whether these peoples historic relations with the Canadian government are related to the problems of chronic poverty that currently engulf them. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPnaCanPoverty.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
poverty faced by Canadas First Nations people related to the historical relations that these people have had with the Canadian government?
Poverty is a very real problem for much of the worlds population. Although this problem is not limited by geography, race, or culture;
it seems that some peoples are more likely to experience it than are others. Canadas indigenous inhabitants are an excellent example of this contention. It must also be
contended that, while many other factors play a role in the poverty facing many of these people, the relations those people have historically had with the Canadian government are likely
one of the most heavy contributors to their continual impoverishment. The intent of this paper, however, is to discuss the poverty many of these people face not just from
a historical perspective but from a contemporary political and social perspective as well. Many of Canadas indigenous peoples have been engulfed in poverty
for much of the history of the country. Poverty among these people it seems has escalated over time rather than declined. This escalation can be attributed to a
number of factors, one of the most prominent of which is the decline of the indigenous nuclear family, a decline which can be traced back to the movement of people
from the largely hunter gatherer subsistence patterns of our forefathers to the industrial subsistence patterns they are expected to reflect today.
It is widely accepted that the aboriginal peoples of Canada, particularly that segment of the people that currently live on Indian reserves, live in a constant state of poverty that
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