The concept of dispossession has become ubiquitous in contemporary critical theory, including analyses of settler colonialism and Indigenous scholarship. It suggests that in addition to being colonised, Indigenous peoples have been deprived of their lands and the territorial foundations of their societies. Critics, however, allege that theories and arguments of Indigenous dispossession are inconsistent, arguing that Indigenous peoples did not have conceptions of land as property or possession. The critics’ question is as follows: how can there be an act of dispossession if there was no prior possession or Indigenous concept of ownership? This article examines a case where there was both prior possession and a concept of ownership adopted by...
© 2002 Hannah RobertAt a time when Anglo-Australian law purports to recognize Indigenous systems of ...
Because increasing numbers of Indigenous people are choosing to work within the legal and political ...
This paper offers a sociological interpretation of the Canadian Comprehensive Land Claims (CLC) proc...
Abstarct: The purpose of this thesis is to examine the normative grounds for indigenous minorities’...
This study offers a critique of the First Nations Property Ownership Act (FNPOA), a contemporary pro...
Drawing on Indigenous peoples' struggles against settler colonialism, Theft Is Property! reconstruct...
In the half-century ending about the time of Confederation a dozen writers addressed awkward questio...
The driving question for this paper relates to the deprivation of citizenship and how states must go...
In most settler societies, such as Australia or Chile, Indigenous Peoples have been dispossessed of ...
The notion of property is fundamentally different between modern culture and indigenous people. In p...
Issues of property and land rights as applied to indigenous groups in Australia (Aboriginals and Tor...
While colonial imposition of the Canadian legal order has undermined Indigenous law, creating gaps a...
Indigeneities are widely constructed as emanating not only from the experience of dispossession in t...
Repossession of land by Indigenous people is commonly understood as a legal act that unfolds within ...
I consider in this paper the extent to which courts rationally and on a principled basis can deny to...
© 2002 Hannah RobertAt a time when Anglo-Australian law purports to recognize Indigenous systems of ...
Because increasing numbers of Indigenous people are choosing to work within the legal and political ...
This paper offers a sociological interpretation of the Canadian Comprehensive Land Claims (CLC) proc...
Abstarct: The purpose of this thesis is to examine the normative grounds for indigenous minorities’...
This study offers a critique of the First Nations Property Ownership Act (FNPOA), a contemporary pro...
Drawing on Indigenous peoples' struggles against settler colonialism, Theft Is Property! reconstruct...
In the half-century ending about the time of Confederation a dozen writers addressed awkward questio...
The driving question for this paper relates to the deprivation of citizenship and how states must go...
In most settler societies, such as Australia or Chile, Indigenous Peoples have been dispossessed of ...
The notion of property is fundamentally different between modern culture and indigenous people. In p...
Issues of property and land rights as applied to indigenous groups in Australia (Aboriginals and Tor...
While colonial imposition of the Canadian legal order has undermined Indigenous law, creating gaps a...
Indigeneities are widely constructed as emanating not only from the experience of dispossession in t...
Repossession of land by Indigenous people is commonly understood as a legal act that unfolds within ...
I consider in this paper the extent to which courts rationally and on a principled basis can deny to...
© 2002 Hannah RobertAt a time when Anglo-Australian law purports to recognize Indigenous systems of ...
Because increasing numbers of Indigenous people are choosing to work within the legal and political ...
This paper offers a sociological interpretation of the Canadian Comprehensive Land Claims (CLC) proc...