Thinking about Indigeneity with Respect to Time and Space: Reflections from Southeast Asia

Most people take it for granted that it is relatively easy to determine who is Indigenous and who is not. Indeed, in the Americas and Oceania, where a lot of settler colonialism occurred, Indigenous peoples are generally considered to be the descendants of those who inhabited these spaces prior to t...

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Main Author: Ian G. Baird
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Université des Sciences et Technologies de Lille 2020-06-01
Series:Espace populations sociétés
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/eps/9628
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spelling doaj-87ca2e4f21fb40f299967124dda2eba62020-11-25T03:43:25ZengUniversité des Sciences et Technologies de LilleEspace populations sociétés0755-78092020-06-01202010.4000/eps.9628Thinking about Indigeneity with Respect to Time and Space: Reflections from Southeast AsiaIan G. BairdMost people take it for granted that it is relatively easy to determine who is Indigenous and who is not. Indeed, in the Americas and Oceania, where a lot of settler colonialism occurred, Indigenous peoples are generally considered to be the descendants of those who inhabited these spaces prior to the arrival of white settlers. In Southeast Asia, however, there was plenty of European colonialism, but much less white settler colonization. This has made the question of “who is Indigenous” much more difficult to answer, and politically contested, as both ethnic minority and majority populations are able to credibly claim that they are “Indigenous” to where they live. Indicative of the contested nature of the issue, and following what has come to be known as the ‘salt-water theory’, most states in Southeast Asia stipulate that their populations are either all Indigenous, or that there are no Indigenous peoples within their borders. Yet new globalized conceptions of indigeneity are circulating, hybridizing and taking hold, albeit unevenly. Crucially, Indigenous peoples are now increasingly being conceptualized as “colonized peoples” rather than simply “first peoples”, thus partially uncoupling indigeneity from space and time. In this paper, I contend that relational ideas associated with indigeneity are perpetually changing and are best considered through the lens of time and space, concepts that serve as the foundation for assertions related to who is Indigenous and who is not.http://journals.openedition.org/eps/9628indigenous peoplesindigeneitySoutheast Asianature-society relationstimespace
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ian G. Baird
spellingShingle Ian G. Baird
Thinking about Indigeneity with Respect to Time and Space: Reflections from Southeast Asia
Espace populations sociétés
indigenous peoples
indigeneity
Southeast Asia
nature-society relations
time
space
author_facet Ian G. Baird
author_sort Ian G. Baird
title Thinking about Indigeneity with Respect to Time and Space: Reflections from Southeast Asia
title_short Thinking about Indigeneity with Respect to Time and Space: Reflections from Southeast Asia
title_full Thinking about Indigeneity with Respect to Time and Space: Reflections from Southeast Asia
title_fullStr Thinking about Indigeneity with Respect to Time and Space: Reflections from Southeast Asia
title_full_unstemmed Thinking about Indigeneity with Respect to Time and Space: Reflections from Southeast Asia
title_sort thinking about indigeneity with respect to time and space: reflections from southeast asia
publisher Université des Sciences et Technologies de Lille
series Espace populations sociétés
issn 0755-7809
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Most people take it for granted that it is relatively easy to determine who is Indigenous and who is not. Indeed, in the Americas and Oceania, where a lot of settler colonialism occurred, Indigenous peoples are generally considered to be the descendants of those who inhabited these spaces prior to the arrival of white settlers. In Southeast Asia, however, there was plenty of European colonialism, but much less white settler colonization. This has made the question of “who is Indigenous” much more difficult to answer, and politically contested, as both ethnic minority and majority populations are able to credibly claim that they are “Indigenous” to where they live. Indicative of the contested nature of the issue, and following what has come to be known as the ‘salt-water theory’, most states in Southeast Asia stipulate that their populations are either all Indigenous, or that there are no Indigenous peoples within their borders. Yet new globalized conceptions of indigeneity are circulating, hybridizing and taking hold, albeit unevenly. Crucially, Indigenous peoples are now increasingly being conceptualized as “colonized peoples” rather than simply “first peoples”, thus partially uncoupling indigeneity from space and time. In this paper, I contend that relational ideas associated with indigeneity are perpetually changing and are best considered through the lens of time and space, concepts that serve as the foundation for assertions related to who is Indigenous and who is not.
topic indigenous peoples
indigeneity
Southeast Asia
nature-society relations
time
space
url http://journals.openedition.org/eps/9628
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