Jeff Corntassel
(Cherokee Nation) Jeff Ganohalidoh Corntassel received his PhD in Political Science from the University of Arizona in 1998. Corntassel’s research and teaching interests focus on “Everyday Acts of Resurgence” and the intersections between Indigenous internationalism, community resurgence, climate change, gender, and community well-being.
Corntassel was the recipient of the 2022-23 Provost’s Advocacy and Activism Award in Equity, Diversity and Inclusion and is also an Honorary Member of the Indigenous & Conserved Communities Areas (ICCA) Consortium. Jeff situates his work at the grassroots with several Indigenous-led, community-based programs and initiatives ranging from local food movement initiatives, land-based renewal projects to gendered colonial violence and protection of homelands. Corntassel is a Co-PI (with Dr. Emmanuel Brunet-Jailly) on a 7-year SSHRC partnership grant entitled “21st Century Borders” and is the Indigenous lead of Pillar 1 for that grant focusing on Indigenous Internationalism and self-determination (https://biglobalization.org/). He is currently completing work for his forthcoming book on Sustainable Self-Determination, which examines Indigenous climate justice, food security, and gender-based resurgence.
Access Jeff's recent writings and an archive of downloadable PDF versions of Jeff's academic research papers, as well as future writings on: https://uvic.academia.edu/JeffCorntassel
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Drawing from Indigenous Wisdom: Centering Life in Society & Economy
Building a "next system" to supplant the current systemic drivers of our economic and political crises should include the wisdom of Indigenous cultures rooted in non-capitalist social and economic forms that center life and nature.
This panel discussion hosted...