Stephanie Gutierrez, co-founder of Hope Nation LLC, explores hows effective community wealth building in Native communities depends on an active process of cultural translation. It is necessary to situate strategies for inclusive economic development within a framework grounded in the traditional values at the core of Native communities. Drawing on the work done in the Learning/Action Lab for Community Wealth Building—a peer-driven cohort of Native communities supported by the Democracy Collaborative and the Northwest Area Foundation—Guttierez explores how Lakota community wealth builders at Thunder Valley Community Development Corporation on the Pine Ridge Reservation worked to center their own experiences, language, and history in the process of launching two social enterprises.
Download An Indigenous Approach to Community Wealth Building: A Lakota Translation
In the report, Gutierrez powerfully demonstrates how any community wealth building effort that does not commit to the work of decolonizing its concepts and strategies will fail to accomplish what it sets out to do. As she notes: "Indigenous communities have the power, strength, and intelligence to develop culturally specific strategies of liberation, health, and well-being. Indigenous people have the right to accept new ways of thinking, reconstruct them, or to deny them. Translation is not only encouraged but necessary."
Table of Contents:
Preface
Introduction
I. Getting Started: Exploration of CWB Concepts
Community Input and Translation
Building Wealth Broadly Held, Locally Rooted
II. Approaches to Economic Development
The Future of CWB in Indian Country
Key Findings
III. Appendix A
Lakota Community Wealth Building
Place
Ownership
Multipliers
Collaboration
Inclusion
Workforce
System
Source: The Democracy Collaborative