This article critically analyses the concept of suffering, with particular emphasis on responsibility for and representations of suffering. Suffering is seen as a social relationship, with objective characteristics, classified by Renault as domination, deprivation and the weakening of intersubjective supports (désaffiliation). Veitch and Wolcher have inquired into legal responsibility for suffering. The author adds that suffering is also constructed subjectively, through aesthetic, political and legal representations. This theoretical model of suffering is applied to recent political and legal issues in Australia dealing with an apology for earlier policies of removing Indigenous children from their families, and a more recent aggressive “e...
This chapter explores the issue of colonial policy, racism and the contemporary demand for reparatio...
In May 1997, one of the defining texts of the contemporary Australian social and political landscape...
Published in Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology, 2005; 15 (6):461-477 at www.interscie...
This article critically analyses the concept of suffering, with particular emphasis on responsibilit...
My thesis explores numerous issues ranging from justice, ethics, law, truth telling and responsibili...
This article argues that structural racism systematically disadvantages Indigenous peoples in the co...
This article provides a summary of the evolving definition of trauma, including different forms of t...
This article explores the issue of apology to the Stolen Generations by the federal government in li...
CAPPE : Working paper 2003/4This paper will concentrate primarily on 'reconciliation' – its adequacy...
Research on racism in Australia by white psychologists is often fraught with tensions surrounding a)...
This article critically analyses the role of law in the process of ‘structural violence’. It conside...
In Australia, law’s imaginary is part of our colonial legacy. Law’s narratives and figures, as well ...
Disagreements over responsibility for human suffering frequently stern from disparate understandings...
This article explores the tensions between the principles of rehabilitation and community protection...
This chapter explores the issue of colonial policy, racism and the contemporary demand for reparatio...
This chapter explores the issue of colonial policy, racism and the contemporary demand for reparatio...
In May 1997, one of the defining texts of the contemporary Australian social and political landscape...
Published in Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology, 2005; 15 (6):461-477 at www.interscie...
This article critically analyses the concept of suffering, with particular emphasis on responsibilit...
My thesis explores numerous issues ranging from justice, ethics, law, truth telling and responsibili...
This article argues that structural racism systematically disadvantages Indigenous peoples in the co...
This article provides a summary of the evolving definition of trauma, including different forms of t...
This article explores the issue of apology to the Stolen Generations by the federal government in li...
CAPPE : Working paper 2003/4This paper will concentrate primarily on 'reconciliation' – its adequacy...
Research on racism in Australia by white psychologists is often fraught with tensions surrounding a)...
This article critically analyses the role of law in the process of ‘structural violence’. It conside...
In Australia, law’s imaginary is part of our colonial legacy. Law’s narratives and figures, as well ...
Disagreements over responsibility for human suffering frequently stern from disparate understandings...
This article explores the tensions between the principles of rehabilitation and community protection...
This chapter explores the issue of colonial policy, racism and the contemporary demand for reparatio...
This chapter explores the issue of colonial policy, racism and the contemporary demand for reparatio...
In May 1997, one of the defining texts of the contemporary Australian social and political landscape...
Published in Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology, 2005; 15 (6):461-477 at www.interscie...