Indigeneity generally refers to the descendants of people who inhabited a territory prior to colonization or the formation of a country, often those who are disadvantaged as a result, and who continue to inhabit the land. Connection to the land is a fundamental element of indigeneity, as is the specific condition of dispossession by colonization: indigeneity, as it is understood today, emerges in relation to colonial processes.
So, although all distinct ethnicities may originate from specific places and times, indigeneity as a political and social identity is meaningful only in the context of colonial domination and resistance.
Not every engineer is engaged in an ongoing struggle for sovereignty against colonizing powers.
So, although all distinct ethnicities may originate from specific places and times, indigeneity as a political and social identity is meaningful only in the context of colonial domination and resistance.
Not every engineer is engaged in an ongoing struggle for sovereignty against colonizing powers.