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Past Pages for July 28 to 30, 2021

Past Pages for July 28 to 30, 2021
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Sagkeeng s scars: colonization has left a traumatic imprint

At the mouth of the river. In Anishinaabemowin, that is what Sagkeeng means. It is what the people of Sagkeeng First Nation have called their homeland, located on the lush banks of the powerful Winnipeg River, since time immemorial. The Canadian government would rename that land the Fort Alexander Indian Reserve, as federal agents carved new territorial boundaries out of the countryside in the aftermath of the signing of Treaty 1. But in the language of the people who call it home, it has always been Sagkeeng. JOHN WOODS / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS Winnipeg River in Powerview and Sagkeeng. Ever since Sagkeeng Chief Kakakepenaise signed Treaty 1 at Lower Fort Garry in 1871, band members have gathered for an annual celebration known as Treaty Days during the last week of July.

Agronomy site looks to new combine, drone to grow studies

Agronomy site looks to new combine, drone to grow studies An agronomy research site in Indian Head is eyeing a new drone and combine, among other items, to advance grain-based agriculture methods. Author of the article: Evan Radford Publishing date: Mar 08, 2021  •  March 8, 2021  •  3 minute read  •  Drones, like the one in this September 2014 file photo near Govan, Sask., are used by agriculture researchers to measure field moisture and temperature in producers fields from an an aerial perspective. Don Healy files Photo by Don Healy /Regina Leader-Post Article content A new combine and a new drone are among the items on the shopping list for a small-plot agriculture research site hoping to grow a bit bigger thanks to an influx of research money.

Monthly Review | Marx and the Indigenous

John Bellamy Foster is editor of Monthly Review and a professor of sociology at the University of Oregon. Brett Clark is associate editor of Monthly Review and a professor of sociology at the University of Utah. Hannah Holleman is a director of the Monthly Review Foundation and an associate professor of sociology at Amherst College. The “turn toward the indigenous” in social theory over the last couple of decades, associated with the critique of white settler colonialism, has reintroduced themes long present in Marxian theory, but in ways that are often surprisingly divorced from Karl Marx’s critique of capitalism, colonialism, and imperialism.

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