Elias, Peter Douglas. Worklessness and Social Pathologies in Aboriginal Communities

Document Type: Journal Articles (2)
Date of Document(s): 1996
Date Range Start : 1600s
Date Range End: 1990s
Indexing Progress: Relationship Indexed
Primary or Secondary Source: Secondary Source
Author: Elias, Peter Douglas
Title: Worklessness and Social Pathologies in Aboriginal Communities
Journal Title: From Human Organization
Date of Publication: 1996
Date of Copyright: c1996
Volume ID: 55
Issue ID: 1
Location in Work: 13-24
Notes: paper and electronic copy-journal article
Abstract: This article describes a model of relationships between worklessness and entrenched patterns of harmful behavior. Most observers agree that worklessness is a cause of social pathologies, and that worklessness is an effect of near-global and broad local causes. Pathological behavior, once entrenched and passed from generation to generation, may become the culture of reproduction. For decades, aboriginal people in Canada, the United States, and Greenland have been attacking the causes and consequences of social pathologies all along the chain of cause and effect, from near-global causes to spiritual and psychological suffering. A development initiative aimed at any link in the chain can consume a large part of the resources that a community might have available for development, so it is important for local planners and decision-makers to know exactly how social pathologies arose in their community -- so development resources can be most effectively applied. The model is tested with a case study of Churchill, Manitoba, to illustrate how the it may be used in planning.
Keywords: employment, work, economic change, community economies, social pathologies, planning, development, Indians, Inuit, Metis, Eskimo, Canada, Manitoba

Patronyms

  • Villebrun

Places

  • Churchill
  • Fort Chimo
  • Fort McMurray
  • Hudson Bay
  • Keewatin
  • Nelson River
  • The Pas
  • York Factory

Subjects

  • Aboriginal
  • Aboriginal Rights
  • Canadian Mental Health Association
  • CNR (Canadian National Railway)
  • Community
  • Community planning
  • Cree
  • Discrimination
  • Economic Development
  • Employment
  • Environmental Degradation
  • Exploitation
  • Federal Government
  • Health
  • Housing Programs and Policy
  • Hunting
  • Identity
  • Income Inequality
  • Inuit
  • Labour
  • Land Rights
  • Language
  • Mental Health
  • Micmac/Mi'kmaq (First Nations)
  • Military
  • MMF (Manitoba Metis Federation)
  • MNO (Metis Nation Ontario)
  • Northern Development
  • Poverty
  • Provincial Government
  • Racism
  • RCMP/ NWMP
  • Self Government
  • Social Pathologies
  • Spousal Violence
  • Traditional Resource Rights
  • Trapping
  • Urbanization
  • Violence
  • WWII (World War II)