Drawing on Alexis Wright’s novel The Swan Book and Irene Watson’s expansive critique of Australian law, this article locates within the settler–Australian imaginary the figure of the ‘wounded Aboriginal child’ as a site of contest between two rival sovereign logics: First Nations sovereignty (grounded in a spiritual connection to the land over tens of millennia) and settler sovereignty (imposed on Indigenous peoples by physical, legal and existential violence for 230 years). Through the conceptual landscape afforded by these writers, the article explores how the arenas of juvenile justice and child protection stage an occlusion of First Nations sovereignty, as a disappearing of the ‘Aboriginality’ of Aboriginal children under Australian set...
It is nowadays evident that the West’s civilising, eugenic zeal have had a devastating impact on all...
Subjectivity coded in Indigenous and non-Indigenous minds maintains a fictional spectre of Aborigina...
Since the colonisation of Australia, the relationship between western settlers and Aborigines has be...
Whilst it is the heinous acts of physical violence that are often foregrounded when imagining fronti...
This article examines the transcripts of the Royal Commission into the Protection and Detention of C...
The forced removal of Indigenous children has been a site of historical debate in Australia since th...
As the first novel written by an Indigenous Australian to win the Miles Franklin Literary Award, Ale...
From the moment that Britain colonised the landmass of Australia, the continuation of traditional In...
The systematic removal of Indigenous Australian children was officially exposed over two decades ago...
In her trenchant critique of the manner in which settler-colonial law, in its seemingly progressive ...
In Australia, law’s imaginary is part of our colonial legacy. Law’s narratives and figures, as well ...
Aboriginal Australians experience trauma that is linked to continuing colonising practices in the pr...
This exegesis is prefaced with an introduction to finding the “real” site of remote Aboriginal commu...
Deposited with permission of the author. © 1999 Anthony F. Moran.The thesis examines different form...
Miranda Johnson’s The Land is Our History turns its gaze to a formative time in recent history...
It is nowadays evident that the West’s civilising, eugenic zeal have had a devastating impact on all...
Subjectivity coded in Indigenous and non-Indigenous minds maintains a fictional spectre of Aborigina...
Since the colonisation of Australia, the relationship between western settlers and Aborigines has be...
Whilst it is the heinous acts of physical violence that are often foregrounded when imagining fronti...
This article examines the transcripts of the Royal Commission into the Protection and Detention of C...
The forced removal of Indigenous children has been a site of historical debate in Australia since th...
As the first novel written by an Indigenous Australian to win the Miles Franklin Literary Award, Ale...
From the moment that Britain colonised the landmass of Australia, the continuation of traditional In...
The systematic removal of Indigenous Australian children was officially exposed over two decades ago...
In her trenchant critique of the manner in which settler-colonial law, in its seemingly progressive ...
In Australia, law’s imaginary is part of our colonial legacy. Law’s narratives and figures, as well ...
Aboriginal Australians experience trauma that is linked to continuing colonising practices in the pr...
This exegesis is prefaced with an introduction to finding the “real” site of remote Aboriginal commu...
Deposited with permission of the author. © 1999 Anthony F. Moran.The thesis examines different form...
Miranda Johnson’s The Land is Our History turns its gaze to a formative time in recent history...
It is nowadays evident that the West’s civilising, eugenic zeal have had a devastating impact on all...
Subjectivity coded in Indigenous and non-Indigenous minds maintains a fictional spectre of Aborigina...
Since the colonisation of Australia, the relationship between western settlers and Aborigines has be...