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    Aboriginal peoples, colonialism and international law : raw law / Irene Watson.

    • Title:Aboriginal peoples, colonialism and international law : raw law / Irene Watson.
    •    
    • Author/Creator:Watson, Irene (Irene Margaret), author.
    • Other Contributors/Collections:Watson, Irene (Irene Margaret). Raw law.
    • Published/Created:Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2015.
    • Holdings

       
    • Library of Congress Subjects:Aboriginal Australians--Legal status, laws, etc.
      Aboriginal Australians--Legal status, laws, etc.--Social aspects.
      Indigenous peoples (International law)
      Law, Aboriginal Australian.
      Philosophy, Aboriginal Australian.
    • Description:xiv, 188 pages ; 25 cm
    • Series:Indigenous peoples and the law.
    • Notes:"A GlassHouse Book."
      Revision of author's thesis (doctoral - University of Adelaide, Dept. of Law, 2000) issued under title: Raw law : the coming of the Muldarbi and the path to its demise.
      Includes bibliographical references and index.
    • ISBN:9780415721752 hardcover
      041572175X hardcover
      9781315858999 electronic bk.
    • Contents:Machine generated contents note: 1. Introduction
      Decentring the muldarbi
      First Nations at the centre
      More than survival
      2. Kaldowinyeri
      Raw Law
      We are related to the natural world
      Being of cycles
      Muldarbi
      colonialism
      Illusion of recognition
      Ruwe and peoples
      Voice and song
      3. Raw Law, song, ceremony, ruwe
      Law in the margins
      Different law ways
      Murrabina
      Law is in the song
      Ruwe and the law
      mob
      Law and extinguishment
      Law and secrecy
      Passing on the law
      Translating the frontier
      4. Naked: the coming of the cloth
      Invisible before a white supremacist lens
      Shame, the rugged cross and ragged clothing
      Enter the church, exit naked
      Dressing the law in rules and regulations
      5. Who's your mob? How are you related?
      Who are we? Who am I?
      'This is my country, this is me'
      Anthropology
      Resistance
      State identities
      Spirituality and the political
      Am I the enemy?
      Coloured skin
      Appropriating identity
      myth of post-colonialism
      Self-determination
      UNDRIP
      from the beginning
      Peoples not populations
      Who are your people?
      6. Dressed to kill
      Genocide denied
      Genocide: international origins
      Genocide: not in Australia
      Deliberate destruction: in the name of protection, segregation and recognition
      Imposition of the national pattern of the state: assimilation and final absorption into whiteness
      Assimilation and the forced removal of children
      Cultural genocide
      Kumarangk: a case study in cultural genocide
      Genocide: it has other names
      Mourning or celebration?
      7. Indigenous ways: a future
      Transforming the space
      International processes and mechanisms
      Decolonisation
      Treaty
      Bibliography
      Books, articles, reports
      International materials
      Other.
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