is there any reading you’d recommend on pre-colonial conceptions of indigenous property rights? since grade school i was always lead to believe that native americans didn’t have land ownership.
Graeber likes talking about the topic, see both Debt: The First 5000 Years and The Dawn of Everything. I’m sure there’s more indigenous sources.
An opening point would be that “native american” is a very broad category. Many different cultures with different lifestyles and legal codes. Hierarchies and morals. They have effectively been homogenised (in the eyes of their colonisers) by their common oppression and conquest.
is there any reading you’d recommend on pre-colonial conceptions of indigenous property rights? since grade school i was always lead to believe that native americans didn’t have land ownership.
Graeber likes talking about the topic, see both Debt: The First 5000 Years and The Dawn of Everything. I’m sure there’s more indigenous sources.
An opening point would be that “native american” is a very broad category. Many different cultures with different lifestyles and legal codes. Hierarchies and morals. They have effectively been homogenised (in the eyes of their colonisers) by their common oppression and conquest.
Maybe not 100% what you’re looking for, but probably covering a lot of the same territory - check out Theft Is Property! by Robert Nichols.