The Welcome to Country (WTC) ceremony and its twin, the Acknowledgement of Traditional Owners, have become prominent anti-racist rituals in the post-settler society of Australia. These rituals are rich in meaning. They are simultaneously emblems of colonisation and dispossession; of recognition and reconciliation; and a periodic focus of political posturing. This article analyses the multiple meanings of WTC ceremonies. In particular, I explore the politics of belonging elicited by WTC and Acknowledgement rituals. Drawing on ethnography of non-Indigenous people who work in Indigenous affairs, I argue that widespread enjoyment of these rituals among White anti-racists is explained because they paradoxically experience belonging through...
Human culture has been proposed to uniquely exhibit a ‘ratchet effect’, with beneficial modification...
There is a moment in travel writer Bill Bryson’s account of his travels in Australia, Down Under, wh...
Inaugural lecture, Ph.D Torben Elgaard Jensen, professor with special responsibilities in techno ant...
From the introduction: The notion of society provided by the French philosopher Gabriel Tarde challe...
In this dissertation, I explore how logics of enclosure underscore policies about national identity,...
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The United Arab Emirates\u27 complex history, its current demographics, its youthfulness as a countr...
In this thesis, I argue that, with certain procedural safeguards in place, physician‐assisted death ...
I start with the premise that the decoupling of the state from civil society and the reassertion of ...
This paper is concerned with demonstrating the capacity of international human rights law and domest...
This paper is based on our experience of presenting at the CARN/IPDC conference. It considers shared...
Defence date: 20 March 2015Examining Board: Prof. Christian Reus-Smit, University of Queensland (Sup...
Moral error theories are often rejected by appeal to ‘companions in guilt’ arguments. The most popul...
Focusing on Chios, at the start of 2016, and my experience there as a volunteer, this paper aims to ...
We argue that burden of proof (BoP) of the kind present in persuasion does not apply to deliberation...
Human culture has been proposed to uniquely exhibit a ‘ratchet effect’, with beneficial modification...
There is a moment in travel writer Bill Bryson’s account of his travels in Australia, Down Under, wh...
Inaugural lecture, Ph.D Torben Elgaard Jensen, professor with special responsibilities in techno ant...
From the introduction: The notion of society provided by the French philosopher Gabriel Tarde challe...
In this dissertation, I explore how logics of enclosure underscore policies about national identity,...
A review of David L. Brown and Kai A. Schaft, Rural People and Communities in the 21st Century:...
The United Arab Emirates\u27 complex history, its current demographics, its youthfulness as a countr...
In this thesis, I argue that, with certain procedural safeguards in place, physician‐assisted death ...
I start with the premise that the decoupling of the state from civil society and the reassertion of ...
This paper is concerned with demonstrating the capacity of international human rights law and domest...
This paper is based on our experience of presenting at the CARN/IPDC conference. It considers shared...
Defence date: 20 March 2015Examining Board: Prof. Christian Reus-Smit, University of Queensland (Sup...
Moral error theories are often rejected by appeal to ‘companions in guilt’ arguments. The most popul...
Focusing on Chios, at the start of 2016, and my experience there as a volunteer, this paper aims to ...
We argue that burden of proof (BoP) of the kind present in persuasion does not apply to deliberation...
Human culture has been proposed to uniquely exhibit a ‘ratchet effect’, with beneficial modification...
There is a moment in travel writer Bill Bryson’s account of his travels in Australia, Down Under, wh...
Inaugural lecture, Ph.D Torben Elgaard Jensen, professor with special responsibilities in techno ant...