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On the Dawn of a New National Ainu Policy: The “‘Ainu’ as a Situation” Today

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Article SummaryOn 6 June 2008, the Ainu were recognized as an indigenous people. A new set of policies was promised for Autumn 2009 in line with the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. This article offers a major review of this policy-making process. It contends that because of the nature of the UN Declaration, the structure of contemporary Japanese politics, and the recommendations of concerned bodies of “experts”, the result has merely been an incorporation of the Ainu within the remit of contemporary neoliberal politics. Taking its inspiration from the writings of the 1970s Ainu poet and thinker, Sasaki Masao, it argues that the time has surely come to ask just why Ainu are repeatedly construed as being somehow in need of “protection”, “aid” and “respect.” and whether or not alternative ways of thinking about Ainu history and politics are possible.
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Title: On the Dawn of a New National Ainu Policy: The “‘Ainu’ as a Situation” Today
Description:
Article SummaryOn 6 June 2008, the Ainu were recognized as an indigenous people.
A new set of policies was promised for Autumn 2009 in line with the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
This article offers a major review of this policy-making process.
It contends that because of the nature of the UN Declaration, the structure of contemporary Japanese politics, and the recommendations of concerned bodies of “experts”, the result has merely been an incorporation of the Ainu within the remit of contemporary neoliberal politics.
Taking its inspiration from the writings of the 1970s Ainu poet and thinker, Sasaki Masao, it argues that the time has surely come to ask just why Ainu are repeatedly construed as being somehow in need of “protection”, “aid” and “respect.
” and whether or not alternative ways of thinking about Ainu history and politics are possible.

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