About this book series
The series, Indigenous-Settler Relations in Australia and the World, brings together scholars interested in examining contemporary Indigenous affairs through questions of relationality. This is a unique approach that represents a deliberate move away from both settler-colonial studies, which examines historical and present impacts of settler states upon Indigenous peoples, and from postcolonial and decolonial scholarship, which is predominantly interested in how Indigenous peoples speak back to the settler state. Closely connected to, but with meaningful contrast to these approaches, the Indigenous-Settler Relations series focuses sharply upon questions about what informs, shapes and gives social, legal and political life to relations between Indigenous peoples and non-Indigenous peoples, both in Australia and globally.
This is an important and timely endeavour. In Australia, relations between Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples and the state are at an impasse. In the wake of the government’s rejection of the Uluru Statement in 2017 there is no shared view on how Indigenous-settler relationships might be ‘reset’, or even if this is possible. The contemporary Indigenous affairs policy domain is characterised by confusion, frustration and disappointment that, despite a seemingly endless succession of policy regimes, efforts to ‘close the gap’ between Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples and other Australians have not resulted in progress.
It is into this contested space that the Indigenous-Settler Relations series seeks to intervene with new, agenda-setting research. The series editors are based in a research unit in the Faculty of Arts at the University of Melbourne—the Indigenous Settler Relations Collaboration. The series will build on the work of the Collaboration in bringing together scholars and practitioners from around Australia, and around the world—particularly other Anglophone settler colonial societies such as Canada, the United States and New Zealand—whose work is concerned with Indigenous-settler relations across a range of disciplines. The multi-faceted approach to Indigenous-Settler Relations that defines the series seeks to capture how the question of relationality is already being asked by scholars across disciplines including political science, history, sociology, law, media, and cultural studies.
Readers of this series will look to it for fresh perspectives and new ideas about how to transform Indigenous-settler relations in Australia and elsewhere. They will learn from the leading lights in an emerging field who will connect their rich, multi-disciplinary scholarship to urgent social and political questions at the heart of Indigenous-Settler relations.
- Electronic ISSN
- 2524-5775
- Print ISSN
- 2524-5767
- Series Editor
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- Sarah Maddison,
- Sana Nakata,
- Julia Hurst
Book titles in this series
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Art and Memorialisation
Truth-Telling Through Creative Practice in Settler Colonial Australia
- Editors:
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- Genevieve Grieves
- Amy Spiers
- Copyright: 2024
Available Renditions
- Hard cover
- eBook
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Public Policy and Indigenous Futures
- Editors:
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- Nikki Moodie
- Sarah Maddison
- Copyright: 2023
Available Renditions
- Hard cover
- Soft cover
- eBook
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Boarding and Australia's First Peoples
Understanding How Residential Schooling Shapes Lives
- Authors:
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- Marnie O’Bryan
- Copyright: 2021
Available Renditions
- Hard cover
- Soft cover
- eBook
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Aboriginal Sports Coaches, Community, and Culture
- Authors:
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- Demelza Marlin
- Nicholas Apoifis
- Andrew Bennie
- Copyright: 2020
Available Renditions
- Hard cover
- Soft cover
- eBook