Australian political studies and the production of disciplinary innocence |
| |
Authors: | Alissa Macoun Kristy Parker |
| |
Affiliation: | School of Political Science and International Studies, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia |
| |
Abstract: | ABSTRACTWhile Australian political studies often appears to have neglected engagements with Indigenous peoples and politics, we argue this is not a simple question of omission. In fact, the discipline is deeply implicated in imperial knowledge production and the authorisation of racialised colonial governance. As non-Indigenous scholars working within Australian political studies, in this paper we reflect on our own discipline in light of several decades of critical scholarship, identifying the production of disciplinary innocence through a theoretical and institutional analysis of Australian political studies knowledge practices. We explore this production via canonical knowledges, institutional processes that contain Indigenous people and knowledge to subjects of policy, and the operation of disciplinary divisions which neutralise scholarship on policy and political institutions. |
| |
Keywords: | Australian political science colonialism racism politics of knowledge indigenous politics |
|
|