Entrepreneurship: a journey of economic self-determination

There is an exciting movement afoot in Canada with rapid growth of Aboriginal participation in the economy through business development. Motivated to recover social and economic independence, Aboriginal people are asserting their rights and pressing for self-determination, using various models of d...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Loustel, Mary Jane
Other Authors: Charles (Wuttunee), Wanda (Native Studies)
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/4924
id ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-MWU.1993-4924
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-MWU.1993-49242014-03-29T03:43:47Z Entrepreneurship: a journey of economic self-determination Loustel, Mary Jane Charles (Wuttunee), Wanda (Native Studies) Eigenbrod, Renate (Native Studies) Piquemal, Nathalie (Educational Administration, Foundations and Psychology) Entrepreneurship Culture Women There is an exciting movement afoot in Canada with rapid growth of Aboriginal participation in the economy through business development. Motivated to recover social and economic independence, Aboriginal people are asserting their rights and pressing for self-determination, using various models of development. In this thesis, economic development through the model of privately-owned enterprise is evaluated considering history, Aboriginal values and a female gender perspective. There is a brief highlight of the history of Aboriginal participation in the economy; the analysis focuses on influences which followed the 1969 Federal Government Statement on Indian Policy, known as The White Paper. The research in this thesis demonstrates that through privately-owned enterprise, Aboriginal entrepreneurs can assert Aboriginal values within a capital market system that does not easily accommodate personal held values; and through this assertion Aboriginal entrepreneurs can achieve business success, self-determination and contribute positively to social and economic well-being for Aboriginal peoples. 2011-09-14T22:59:47Z 2011-09-14T22:59:47Z 2011-09-14 http://hdl.handle.net/1993/4924
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic Entrepreneurship
Culture
Women
spellingShingle Entrepreneurship
Culture
Women
Loustel, Mary Jane
Entrepreneurship: a journey of economic self-determination
description There is an exciting movement afoot in Canada with rapid growth of Aboriginal participation in the economy through business development. Motivated to recover social and economic independence, Aboriginal people are asserting their rights and pressing for self-determination, using various models of development. In this thesis, economic development through the model of privately-owned enterprise is evaluated considering history, Aboriginal values and a female gender perspective. There is a brief highlight of the history of Aboriginal participation in the economy; the analysis focuses on influences which followed the 1969 Federal Government Statement on Indian Policy, known as The White Paper. The research in this thesis demonstrates that through privately-owned enterprise, Aboriginal entrepreneurs can assert Aboriginal values within a capital market system that does not easily accommodate personal held values; and through this assertion Aboriginal entrepreneurs can achieve business success, self-determination and contribute positively to social and economic well-being for Aboriginal peoples.
author2 Charles (Wuttunee), Wanda (Native Studies)
author_facet Charles (Wuttunee), Wanda (Native Studies)
Loustel, Mary Jane
author Loustel, Mary Jane
author_sort Loustel, Mary Jane
title Entrepreneurship: a journey of economic self-determination
title_short Entrepreneurship: a journey of economic self-determination
title_full Entrepreneurship: a journey of economic self-determination
title_fullStr Entrepreneurship: a journey of economic self-determination
title_full_unstemmed Entrepreneurship: a journey of economic self-determination
title_sort entrepreneurship: a journey of economic self-determination
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/4924
work_keys_str_mv AT loustelmaryjane entrepreneurshipajourneyofeconomicselfdetermination
_version_ 1716658342183567360