March 10, 2020
Researcher sees how casinos can become 'windigos' for Indigenous communities
In Algonquian legends, a mythical giant cannibal 鈥 a windigo 鈥 wreaks havoc on communities, consuming people and causing illness and death. Anyone could become a windigo at any time, and people were always cautious not to transform into the creature that consumes others. 聽
PhD, posits that Indigenous casinos are a modern expression of the windigo and he will present his work 鈥 Gambling with the Windigo: Theorizing Indigenous Casinos in Canada 鈥 later this month at the 19th annual (AGRI) conference at the Banff Centre.
Indigenous perspective on gambling
鈥淭here is a social image of gambling that is almost inherently wrong. There are questions about morality of gambling and public perception. But from an Indigenous perspective, gambling isn't inherently evil,鈥 says Manitowabi, associate professor in the School of Northern and Community Studies, Laurentian University in Sudbury and Three Fires Anishinaabe from Wiikwemkoong Unceded Territory.
鈥淐asinos represent a modern version of the windigo in the sense that the potential is there for casinos to consume communities and people in the same way that the cannibal did in legends. And because that potential is there, communities must be careful.鈥
A call for community caution
Communities should be cautious in how they invest, situate and react to casinos, he says. 鈥淐ommunity response to gambling is very calculated in the sense that communities negotiate the implications of casinos in their community and recognize that there's a lot of power within the casino in terms of new income generated, new relationships with provincial governments and even the federal government.鈥
Manitowabi, who holds cross-appointments in the School of Indigenous Relations, Laurentian University and the Northern Ontario School of Medicine, is one of 16 at the AGRI conference, entitled Freedom, Justice and Sovereignty in Gaming. AGRI is a consortium of the University of Alberta, 草莓污视频导航 and the University of Lethbridge. The conference, March 26 to 28, is expanding its focus this year beyond gambling addiction and treatment.
Explore social issues and gambling
鈥淲e are targeting a broader audience than usual,鈥 says conference chair聽Fiona Nicoll, professor in the Department of Political Science and Alberta Gambling Research Institute Chair聽in Gambling Policy at the University of Alberta.聽鈥淨uestions of freedom, sovereignty and justice in gaming are important for all citizens in Alberta and the Indigenous program will relate gambling to questions of rights, reconciliation and economic justice.鈥
The conference includes a diverse range of speakers and attendees including Indigenous leaders, video-gamers and lawyers as well as anthropologists, archaeologists,聽sociologists, literary researchers, public health experts and political scientists. 鈥淩ather than holding parallel sessions, all participants will be able to experience a continuous plenary session,鈥 says Dr. Nicoll, PhD. 鈥淚'm really looking forward to the new dialogue about gambling between speakers and audience members that聽will develop.鈥
Social, political, cultural impact of casinos
Manitowabi, who is collaborating in a national study examining the social, political, economic and cultural impact of casinos in Canada, is also looking forward to broadening the conversation. 鈥淕ambling studies are mostly dominated by a biomedical orientation,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 see a real disconnect between the perspectives that I have to offer and those articulated at academic conferences, even to the point where it feels as though I'm not even on the same page with fellow researchers.鈥
for , March 26-28 at The Banff Centre.