
"This book clearly marks a turning point in anthropological research in the
Canadian North."--American Anthropologist
". . . a sensitive and significant set of essays . . . . It provides important
data and substantial insights by which other scholars may comprehend equivalent responses
to the welfare colonialism that has now become endemic to the modern nation-state and by which they
may explain the development of local-level resistance to the tutelage these states use to fool, or
at least to placate, their populations."--Reviews in Anthropology
"The White Arctic lives up to the high standard we have come to expect from the
Institute of Social and Economic Research at St. John's."--Man
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