The chapter considers three challenges that Indigenous perspectives provide for Southern criminology: the importance of understanding colonialism and the coloniality of power; the role of Indigenous knowledges, epistemologies and methodologies; and the political questions that Indigenous peoples pose for settler colonial states. The chapter argues that criminology needs to be reconfigured to overcome its historical roots, its epistemological blind spots and its politically compromised positions
This chapter is concerned with the relationality of law and politics in historical and contemporary ...
Biko Agozino (2010: i) has described the discipline of criminology as a ‘control-freak’; one whose ‘...
This paper offers an Indigenous-centred, critical perspective on the Colonial Projects (Thomas, 1994...
This article explores the epistemological and methodological challenges posed by Indigenous peoples ...
This article explores the epistemological and methodological challenges posed by Indigenous peoples ...
Indigenous Criminology is the first book to comprehensively explore Indigenous people's contact with...
Indigenous Criminology is the first book to comprehensively explore Indigenous people\u27s contact w...
Southern Criminology is a theoretical perspective that shifts the focus from the state criminal just...
There is growing recognition in criminology and social work of the importance of Indigenous knowledg...
This chapter deals with the difficult question: Should the Indigenous academy develop an Indigenous-...
[Extract] This chapter explores the relationship between Indigenous people and rural criminology. Th...
Indigenous peoples, their cultures and territories, have been subjected to continuous victimisation,...
Indigenous peoples, their cultures and territories, have been subjected to continuous victimisation,...
The authors of this chapter contextualise crime and criminal justice within Australian colonial hist...
The idea of Southern criminology poses a challenge not just to its mainstream parent, which is now ...
This chapter is concerned with the relationality of law and politics in historical and contemporary ...
Biko Agozino (2010: i) has described the discipline of criminology as a ‘control-freak’; one whose ‘...
This paper offers an Indigenous-centred, critical perspective on the Colonial Projects (Thomas, 1994...
This article explores the epistemological and methodological challenges posed by Indigenous peoples ...
This article explores the epistemological and methodological challenges posed by Indigenous peoples ...
Indigenous Criminology is the first book to comprehensively explore Indigenous people's contact with...
Indigenous Criminology is the first book to comprehensively explore Indigenous people\u27s contact w...
Southern Criminology is a theoretical perspective that shifts the focus from the state criminal just...
There is growing recognition in criminology and social work of the importance of Indigenous knowledg...
This chapter deals with the difficult question: Should the Indigenous academy develop an Indigenous-...
[Extract] This chapter explores the relationship between Indigenous people and rural criminology. Th...
Indigenous peoples, their cultures and territories, have been subjected to continuous victimisation,...
Indigenous peoples, their cultures and territories, have been subjected to continuous victimisation,...
The authors of this chapter contextualise crime and criminal justice within Australian colonial hist...
The idea of Southern criminology poses a challenge not just to its mainstream parent, which is now ...
This chapter is concerned with the relationality of law and politics in historical and contemporary ...
Biko Agozino (2010: i) has described the discipline of criminology as a ‘control-freak’; one whose ‘...
This paper offers an Indigenous-centred, critical perspective on the Colonial Projects (Thomas, 1994...