Community Development at the Department of Indian Affairs in the 1960's: Much Ado About Nothing

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Database ID26053
InstitutionUniversity of Saskatchewan Libraries Special Collections
Fonds/CollectionUniversity of Saskatchewan Library Theses and Dissertations
File/Item ReferenceTheses Soc. C9675
Date of creation1997
Physical description/extent1 thesis; 121 pages
Number of images121
External URLhttp://library2.usask.ca/theses/available/etd-01032007-140804/unrestricted/Cunningham_robert_1997.pdf
Scope and contentThis thesis tells the story of the Community Development Program (CDP) of the Department of Indian Affairs. The Program was initiated in Canada in the early 1960s during a time of international popularity for the community development approach, and a national sentiment that the federal government ought to do something to positively change the situation for Indian people in Canada. The Program is probably best remembered for the commotion that its young practitioners caused when they began to encourage community development on Canadian Indian Reserves. The question that guides the research asks whether or not the CDP was different from previous policies of the Department of Indian Affairs. The author asserts that the CDP was novel in its organization, the problem it sought to address, and the way in which it treated Indian people. Data were gathered through interviews with former employees of the Department of Indian Affairs and through archival research into the files of the Department and its former employees. The author uses the theoretical framework developed by Jurgen Habermas and adapted by John Forester to interpret both traditional Canadian policies directed towards Indian people and the Community Development Program.
Restrictions on accessThere are no restrictions on access.
ContributerCunningham, Robert Craig (author)
University of Saskatchewan. Department of Sociology (Supervisory department / submitted to)
Copyright holderCunningham, Robert Craig
Other terms governing use and reproductionPermission given for on-line access.
TypeTheses
Primary MediaTextual documents
Provenance Access PointUniversity of Saskatchewan Library. Theses and Dissertations
Treaty boundariesCanada -- National
Cultural regionNo data
SubjectCommunity Development
Government policy
People
Date Range(s)1990-1999
Permanent Link https://digital.scaa.sk.ca/ourlegacy/permalink/26053