1. Some Factors Shaping the Expansion of Hutterite Colonies in Alberta Since the Repeal of the Communal Property Act in 1973.
- Author
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EVANS, SIMON M.
- Subjects
- *
HUTTERIAN Brethren (Anabaptists) , *COMMONS , *LAND tenure laws , *COLONIES , *COMMUNAL living , *RURAL population , *HISTORY , *SOCIAL history , *HISTORY of land tenure ,ALBERTA politics & government, 1971- - Abstract
The Hutterites are a religious sect, an ethnic group, and a communal brotherhood. Since their arrival in North America in 1874, they have resisted assimilation and held onto their language, their schools and socialization processes, their clothing and their lifestyle. Two clan groups of Hutterites relocated to Alberta in 1918. During and after World War Two, the freedom of these Hutterites to buy land on which to establish new colonies was curtailed by legislation. It was not until 1973 that the incoming Lougheed government repealed the Communal Property Act. This paper describes Hutterite expansion during the past thirty-five years and examines the changing context in which their locational decisions have been made. First, the attitudes of the main "actors" - the government, the Hutterites and the people of Alberta - are evaluated, and then some of the issues that have remained contentious are examined. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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