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Indigenous Power

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Bristol Bay Partnership Memorandum of Understanding is framed and ... Bristol Bay Area Health Corporation (BBAHC) Each Partner has village base Tribal boards ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Indigenous Power


1
Indigenous Power
  • Leveraging Indigenous Power How to Build a
    Collaborative Community
  • Regional Development Agreement
  • Sheila Selkregg, Ph.D
  • University of Alaska Anchorage .

2
Events Over Time Indigenous Power
  • Bristol Bay Partnership Memorandum of
    Understanding is framed and defined by the events
    that preceded and followed it.
  • Bristol Bays memorandum decision process grew in
    response to Bristol Bays people and events.

3
A Continuum Indigenous Power
  • Every region is at some point on the continuum
    of its leadership stability, local capacity, and
    control, and its readiness for community
    development decisions.
  • Community Development increases local capacity
    to initiate and manage change that supports the
    communitys long-term sustainability and well
    being.

4
Events Change Indigenous Power
  • Events, timing, resources, and tools can help or
    hinder a community at any point on that
    continuum.
  • Decisions are based its needs, power structure,
    and values, all of which can change very quickly.
  • The ablity to manage and flourish in time of
    change is tied to resiliency.

5
Complex and resilient Indigenous Power
  • Strong village, sub regional, and regional
    leadership families
  • Active elders and younger, well-educated,
    members
  • Wellness movement created new leaders.

6
Complex resilient Indigenous Power
  • Traditional chief and elder power structures with
    western structures of democratically elected
    officials
  • Aleut and Alutiiq tribes on the ocean side of
    the Alaska Peninsula
  • the Dena'ina Athabascans of Iliamna Lake and Lake
    Clark
  • the Yup'ik on the Bristol Bay side of the
    peninsula

7
Taking Action Indigenous Power
  • 2000 The Bristol Bay Wellness Program
  • 2003 Summit, Managing Change Community Planning
    and Our Future
  • 2004 Bristol Bay Collaborative Regional Strategic
    Effort
  • Village Economic Development Planning Grants

8
Building Agreements Indigenous Power
  • 2003 Draft Memorandum of Agreement
  • The Agreement blew up over trust issues between
    Bristol Bay municipal, tribal, and non-profit
    entities.
  • The Denali Commission sought to select one of
    the five tribal entities as the Commissions
    representative.
  • The dangers of empowerment

9
Coordinating the effort Indigenous Power
  • Bristol Bay Partners Collaborative Regional
    Planning Effort (USDA/Foraker)
  • Bristol Bay Native Association (BBNA)
  • Bristol Bay Native Corporation (BBNC)
  • Bristol Bay Economic Development Corporation
    (BBEDC)
  • Bristol Bay Housing Authority (BBHA)
  • Bristol Bay Area Health Corporation (BBAHC)
  • Each Partner has village base Tribal boards
  • Associate Partners
  • Regional
  • Non profits
  • Municipal

10
Observations Indigenous Power
  • Bristol Bay Region interfaced with internal and
    external interests as they worked through complex
    cultural, social, heath, and economic issues.
  • Through that experience, the region has
    expressed consistent observations and insights
    regarding power and wellness.

11
Observations Indigenous Power
  • Key themes
  • local power and wellness
  • recognize process as an outcome
  • who is in charge of the process
  • Agenda
  • Content
  • Timing
  • Power

12
Ownership Indigenous Power
  • Ownership of the processes that bring about
    change is important to how individuals define
    themselves and how they relate to their
    community.
  • The power to make decisions, to receive
    recognition, and to take responsibility is
    directly linked to a sense of self worth and
    community health.

13
Self Directed Success Indigenous Power
  • When you know what you want and why, and you are
    in charge of getting it, your chance for
    successful outcomes increase.
  • Healthy communities and regions make and direct
    their decisions regarding essential community
    change.

14
Dangerous Help Indigenous Power
  • Helper can be part of the problem
  • Relying on an outside expert can reduce the
    individuals and communitys sense of autonomy,
    and ultimately undermine their control over key
    decisions.

15
Control Indigenous Power
  • As communities and regions organize, they can be
    derailed by fragmented and disjointed delivery
    structures.
  • The need to rely on an outside expert can
    reduce the individuals and communitys sense of
    autonomy, and ultimately undermine their control
    over key decisions.

16
Sense of Loss Indigenous Power
  • Lack of control reduces the sense of ownership
    and can result in loss.
  • That loss can be expressed as a lack of self care
    or
  • lack of interest in maintenance and repair of
    items that the individual or community has
    received.
  • .

17
Ownership Indigenous Power
  • Concepts such as ownership replace empowerment,
    and responsibility replaces victimization.

18
Tensions Indigenous Power
  • Indigenous decision making and conflict
    resolution draw from traditional, cultural,
    consensus-based protocols.
  • Western/democratic decision making is a win/lose
    structure.
  • Having two systems creates powerful leadership
    resilience.
  • Differences create tensions that can be both
    creative or destructive.

19
Historical Tension Indigenous Power
  • Tension is present in indigenous history.
  • Abandonment
  • Learned helplessness
  • Trust
  • Compassion
  • Resilience
  • Ingenuity
  • Independence

20
Trusted Structure Indigenous Power
  • Bristol Bay Regional Efforts
  • Slow
  • Transparent
  • Thoughtfully inclusive
  • Careful agenda
  • Built on consensus
  • How you do it is what you get!

21
Bristol Bay Partners Structure Indigenous Power
  • Bristol Bay (BB) Partners Leadership Meetings
  • BB Planning Committee Work Sessions (Staff
    support to leadership)
  • A Memorandum of Understanding
  • Village work sessions

22
Staying on Track Indigenous Power
  • Community and regional discipline
  • Five-Year Development Strategy
  • 2006 Action Agenda
  • Accountability
  • Meeting new challenges and opportunities
  • grounded in the agreed upon values and mission

23
Accomplishments Indigenous Power
  • Celebrate Success
  • Protocols
  • Regular meeting
  • No surprised
  • Consultation with board and village
  • Communication
  • Regional Calendar
  • Alternative energy approaches
  • Actions
  • Lobbying for regional issues
  • Reducing energy and freight costs
  • Outcomes
  • Energy plan
  • Alterative energy wind system at a local hospital

24
The Individual Indigenous Power
  • Survival and flourishing begins as an individual
    choice and moves to a community choice.
  • In turn, healthy communities create people who
    know how to make good, resilient choices.

25
Trusted Structures Indigenous Power
  • Let go of ambition
  • Passionately strive for the things that are
    commonly valued
  • Welcome truth
  • Compassionate
  • Listen, assess, and act
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