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y separately published work icon Sovereignty : Frontiers of Possibility anthology   criticism  
Issue Details: First known date: 2013... 2013 Sovereignty : Frontiers of Possibility
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Contents

* Contents derived from the Honolulu, Hawaii,
c
United States of America (USA),
c
Americas,
:
University of Hawaii Press , 2013 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Submerged Sovereignty : Native Title within a History of Incorporation, Ben Silverstein , single work criticism

'The possibility of a new beginning was central to celebrations of the advent

of native title in Australia. A re-imagined history of white invasion

and settlement could, as then Prime Minister Paul Keating proclaimed,

provide the possibility for a new foundation “because after 200 years, we

will at last be building on the truth.” This “truth” was embodied in the

recognition of the presence of Indigenous communities, their laws, and

their dispossession. Unlike such British colonies as India or Nigeria, the

colonization of Australia proceeded on the basis that there were no Indigenous

people who held property rights and who therefore had any entitlement

to remain on the land or to govern. This is central to the logic of

settler colonialism, which erases the traces of Indigeneity such that settlers

replace Indigenous peoples, sovereignties, and communities on the land.

This logic has been reflected in Australian jurisprudence around settlement,

the origins of property, and the reception of British law.'

(p. 60-85) Section: Part I: Sovereignty and Nation
Aboriginal Sovereignty : A Practical Roadmap, Larissa Behrendt , single work criticism

'Growing up in the Aboriginal community, the idea of Aboriginal sovereignty

became a concept that seemed inherent.'

(p. 163-177) Section: Part II: Sovereignty Stories
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