The technical is political: settler colonialism and the Australian Indigenous policy system |
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Authors: | Elizabeth Strakosch |
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Affiliation: | School of Political Science and International Studies, University of Queensland, St Lucia, QLD, Australia |
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Abstract: | Contemporary Australian Indigenous policy changes rapidly and regularly fails to deliver its stated aims. Additionally, political and social relationships between Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples and the Australian state remain complex and contested. This article draws on critical Indigenous theory, alongside the increasingly influential scholarly paradigm of settler colonialism, to draw these two elements together. It highlights the ongoing nature of colonial conflict, and the partisan nature of state institutions and processes. While policy is usually framed as a depoliticised, technical practice of public management for Indigenous wellbeing, I suggest that it also seeks to ‘domesticate’ Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, perform their dysfunction and demonstrate state legitimacy. This is especially the case in Australia, which has a long tradition of framing domestic welfare policy – rather than legal agreements – as the ‘solution’ to settler colonial conflict. |
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Keywords: | Indigenous policy Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander policy settler colonialism indigenous advancement strategy sovereignty public policy |
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