Text reads: The Rise of Indigenous Economic Power by Carol Anne Hilton, Axiom Awards Winner.

We’re pleased to share that the Axiom Business Book Awards, which recognize the year’s most impactful business titles from around the world, have announced their 2026 winners.

Among them, New Society Publishers is proud to celebrate The Rise of Indigenous Economic Power by Carol Anne Hilton, awarded Bronze in the Economics category.

Bronze Winner in Economics

Book cover of *The Rise of Indigenous Economic Power* by Carol Anne Hilton, beautifully capturing the ascent of Indigenous communities in economic influence.

The Rise of Indigenous Economic Power: Deconstructing Indian Act Economics

by Carol Anne Hilton

The Indigenous economy is surging, but full Indigenous economic participation is still lacking, thwarted by the colonial and racist policies of Canada’s Indian Act. The Rise of Indigenous Economic Power deconstructs these historic and systemic barriers and presents an ethical response based on Indigenomics in action.

View Award Winner

Join the Conversation

YouTube
Instagram
Pinterest

Spread the Knowledge

Learn about the Awards

View the Award Winners

Featured Authors

author Carol Anne Hilton

Carol Anne Hilton, MBA, is founder of the Indigenomics Institute, which is focused on the economic empowerment of Indigenous peoples to design their own futures and fully realize the potential of the emerging Indigenous economy. She is a Hesquiaht woman of Nuu chah nulth descent from the west coast of Vancouver Island and is from the house of Mam’aayutch, a chief’s house, a name which means “on the edge.” Hilton is the first generation out of Canadian residential schools, fifth generation since the existence of the Indian Act, and comes from over 10,000 years of the potlatch tradition of giving and demonstration of wealth and relationship. She is deeply connected to focusing on building a collective reality that centers Indigenous peoples in social and cultural well-being and economic empowerment today and is leading the evolution of Canada’s $100 billion Indigenous economy. An advisor to governments, business, and First Nations, she lives in Victoria, BC.

 

More blogs from New Society Publishers

Select your currency
Secret Link