Acknowledgments
1: Introduction
2: The Identity Approach : Public decision making in diverse
societies
3: Multiculturalism, identity quietism, and identity skepticism
4: Diversity and sexual equality: The challenge of
incommensurability
5: Religious identity and the problem of authenticity
6: Indigenous identity: The perils of essentialism and
domestication
7: Conclusion: Reasons of identity
Bibliography
Avigail Eisenberg has been Associate Professor in the Department of
Political Science at the University of British Columbia, where she
spent the first ten years of her academic career. She has held
visiting research fellowships at the University of Edinburgh
(1996-7), and the Universite de Montreal (2004-5). She has been a
resident fellow at the Rockefeller Centre in Bellagio, Italy. Dr.
Avigail Eisenberg is a Professor in the Department of Political
Science and a
Faculty Associate in the Indigenous Governance Program at the
University of Victoria.
a timely and important contribution to the robust literature on
multiculturalism and identity politics.
*Rina Verma Williams, Law and Politics Book Review*
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