Neoliberal Indigenous Policy: Settler Colonialism and the 'Post-Welfare' State

Neoliberal Indigenous Policy: Settler Colonialism and the 'Post-Welfare' State

by Elizabeth Strakosch
Neoliberal Indigenous Policy: Settler Colonialism and the 'Post-Welfare' State

Neoliberal Indigenous Policy: Settler Colonialism and the 'Post-Welfare' State

by Elizabeth Strakosch

eBook1st ed. 2015 (1st ed. 2015)

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Overview

This book examines recent changes to Indigenous policy in English-speaking settler states, and locates them within the broader shift from social to neo-liberal framings of citizen-state relations via a case study of Australian federal policy between 2000 and 2007.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781137405418
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan UK
Publication date: 02/05/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 213
File size: 409 KB

About the Author

Elizabeth Strakosch is Lecturer in Public Policy and Politics at the School of Political Science and International Studies at the University of Queensland, Australia. Her research focuses on the intersection of policy and political relationships, and explores the ways that new public policies and administration techniques transform our political identities in liberal and settler colonial contexts.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction
2. Neoliberal Colonialism
3. Analysing Neoliberalism and Settler Colonialism
4. Policy: Assuming Sovereignty
5. Australian Indigenous Policy 2000-2007
6. Redefining the 'Aboriginal Problem'
7. Building Capacity
8. Authoritarian Paternalism
9. Conclusion

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

"Reading Elizabeth Strakosch's incisive account of the procedural mechanisms whereby neoliberal settler colonialism seeks to reduce the politics of conquest to a welfare issue reminds me of second-wave feminism's transformative insistence that the personal is political. Lucidly, methodically and with great intelligence, Strakosch shows how, in the twenty-first century, the technical has become political, as she uncovers the technocratic ruses whereby Australian governments have sought to convert the unresolved question of Indigenous sovereignty into a depoliticised managerial agenda, the preserve of service delivery rather than international relations. The implications of this astute analysis are immediate and profound". - Patrick Wolfe, La Trobe University, Australia.

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