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What Do We Want: A Political History of Aboriginal Land Rights in New South Wales

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

What Do We Want: A Political History of Aboriginal Land Rights in New South Wales

Contributors:

By (Author) Heidi Norman

ISBN:

9781922059901

Publisher:

Aboriginal Studies Press

Imprint:

Aboriginal Studies Press

Publication Date:

1st May 2015

Country:

Australia

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Human rights, civil rights
Indigenous peoples

Dewey:

994.4

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

288

Dimensions:

Width 152mm, Height 230mm

Weight:

600g

Description

The passage of land rights laws in New South Wales in 1983 saw political intrigue, deception and disappointment as well as unprecedented engagement by Aboriginal citizens and their supporters. How could a sympathetic NSW State Government redress the effects of two hundred years of colonisation in the most densely populated state in the Commonwealth "What do we want" was the rallying call for land rights activists. Heidi Norman's insightful book begins in the late 1970s when Aboriginal people, armed with new skills, framed their land rights demands. The 1978 land rights inquiry and the laws that followed brought Aboriginal people -- and the state -- into new and different relationships of power. These have been the source of on-going contestation ever since. For NSW Aboriginal people, the laws allowed an unparalleled level of involvement in government, and in governing. It opened up a host of possibilities. Thirty years later, with over a billion dollars in land assets, a near billion-dollar investment fund, and with over 115 local Aboriginal land councils, the resultant network of land councils is the largest Aboriginal representative body in the country. This book reveals the challenges of Aboriginal people adjusting to modernity as land councils struggle to fully realise the hopes of their members, many of whom continue to suffer chronic disadvantage.

Reviews

I look forward to seeing it in print. I think it will make a valuable contribution to the ongoing debate on the tensions and interactions between Aboriginal people and the Statethis book is not only going to be very interesting in its own right but will open up several pathways for further research and analysis. Professor Heather Goodall

Author Bio

Dr Heidi Norman is a Senior lecturer in the Communications Program in the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences (FASS) at the university of Technology, Sydney. Her research focuses on NSW Aboriginal history and politics with particular emphasis on the modernising effects of rule, shared history and the challenges of Aboriginal adjustment to modernity. She teaches in the areas of applied research and Australian history and politics. She is a descendant of the Gomeroi people of north-western NSW.

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