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-List Of Titles -The scale politics of reconciliation

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/125439

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Title
The scale politics of reconciliation
Related
Australasian Digital Theses Program
Publisher
Australia : Macquarie University
Date
2008
Author/Creator
Cross, Sherrie Ann
Description
"October 2008".
Description
Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Division of Environmental and Life Sciences, Dept. of Human Geography, 2008.
Description
Bibliography: leaves 356-371.
Description
Introduction -- Methodology -- Literature review -- Conceptual framework: scale, scale erasure and contemporary indigenous governances -- Indigenous affairs policy 1972 - 2000: a scaled analysis -- Contemporary indigenous governances -- Scaled policy mechanisms and the erasure of indigenous scales of governance -- The view from the national scale -- Conclusion.
Description
This thesis shows that Indigenous self determination is impossible without a fundamental restructuring of the political relations between Indigenous communities and Australian federal governments. Continuing colonial relations are examined through the case study of reconciliation policy as a phenomenon of political scaling. -- The scaled processes, procedures and structures of the policy are examined through interviews with two groups: 1) Members of the Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation and politicians with portfolio responsibility for the policy; and 2) Members of Indigenous local and discursive communities. -- This exercise provides insight into how the scaled mechanisms of the policy--as reflected in the community consultations for constructing the documents of reconciliation--enacted different sets of processes in different domains. At the public level, the scaled consultative processes were represented as a democratic exercise that privileged Indigenous participation at national and local levels. Simultaneously, the national scale at which policy agents operated integrated them with government policy and the limited options that it provided for Indigenous self determination. For Indigenous communities, the scaled policy mechanisms deepened the imposition of government agendas and facilitated a multi-scaled management of dissent. This management operated at various scales through exclusion, marginalisation, repression, bureaucratic expedience and manipulation of public Indigenous discourse. -- These various processes are conceptualised as scale erasure. The assertion of colonial power through a series of government top-down scaled structures and mechanisms produced an erasure of Indigenous scales of governance. This study shows that Indigenous community governance is a diverse, active, ongoing and changing domain, which spans urban, rural/regional and remote, as well as discursive contexts. These are all conceived of as Contemporary Indigenous Governances because they are the contemporary outcomes of historical and geographical processes, and of contemporary Indigenous community agency. Yet the scales at which these governances operate and could be extended for formal representation have been truncated and erased by successive colonial government policies. -- This thesis highlights 1) the fundamental philosophical, political and procedural differences between top-down government policy, and that which could be constructed from, and accountable to Indigenous communities and 2) the prospect of the latter for the construction of sustainable self-determination.
Description
Mode of access: World Wide Web.
Description
ix, 417 leaves. ill
Subject Keyword
Scaling (Social sciences)
Subject Keyword
Autonomy
Subject Keyword
Aboriginal Australians -- Politics and government
Subject Keyword
Aboriginal Australians -- Government policy
Subject Keyword
Aboriginal Australians -- Government relations
Subject Keyword
Reconciliation -- Australia
Subject Keyword
Policy sciences
Subject Keyword
Reconciliation -- Australia -- History
Resource Type
Thesis PhD
Organisation
Macquarie University. Dept. of Human Geography

Identifier
http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/125439
Identifier
1455998
Language
eng
Rights
Copyright disclaimer: http://www.copyright.mq.edu.au
Rights
Copyright Sherrie Ann Cross 2008.
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"The scale politics of reconciliation"
 
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