Abstract

Religion and public policy are interconnected across a variety of issues. One aspect where this linkage has been understudied is religion and Indigenous sacred sites protection. This article aims to address this gap by analyzing how Indigenous women’s activism advances this cause. The focus is on how Indigenous Peoples, specifically women, use grassroots activism to provoke change on public policy in the context of the protection of Indigenous sacred sites. Two case studies are used to illustrate this concept: the American “Women of Standing Rock” and the Canadian “Idle No More” grassroots social movements. My analysis draws from interpretative methods. Interpretative research revolves around the concept of individuals as active producers of meaning. The women-led grassroots social movements at issue highlight a fundamental lack of awareness of the historical and current struggles of Indigenous Peoples, both in the US and Canada. Modern technologies and social media provide democratic means for grassroots social movements to be heard and empowered. The growing movement by Indigenous women to assert their rights, and their quest for self-determination in land use and sacred sites protection create a positive discourse that advances Indigenous women’s position in crossing the obstacles onto “institutional places of privilege,” hence influencing public policy.

Highlights

  • Religion and public policy are linked across a variety of issues

  • This work focuses on how Indigenous Peoples, and women, use grassroots activism to provoke change on public policy in the context of the protection of Indigenous sacred sites

  • For Indigenous Peoples, spirituality is not compartmentalized—it refers to their whole person, to their identity (Parke-Sutherland 2018)

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Summary

Introduction

Religion and public policy are linked across a variety of issues One area where this linkage has been understudied is religion and Indigenous sacred sites protection. This article addresses this gap by exploring ways Indigenous women’s activism can help advance this cause. This work focuses on how Indigenous Peoples, and women, use grassroots activism to provoke change on public policy in the context of the protection of Indigenous sacred sites. For Indigenous Peoples, spirituality is not compartmentalized—it refers to their whole person, to their identity (Parke-Sutherland 2018). This trait influences the way that Indigenous communities respond to the non-Indigenous world. Tension can Religions 2020, 11, 380; doi:10.3390/rel11080380 www.mdpi.com/journal/religions

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