Popular Justice and Community Regeneration: Pathways of Indigenous Reform
By (Author) Kayleen M. Hazlehurst
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
13th June 1995
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Human rights, civil rights
Rural communities
Social and cultural history
323.11
Hardback
264
Formal justice systems have not served the human rights of native and aboriginal groups well and have led to growing natural and international pressure for equal treatment and increased political and legal autonomy. Indigenous activities in areas of community healing have created a fervor of interest as native peoples have shared experiences with programs that reduce addiction, family violence, child abuse, and sociocultural disintegration of traditional communities. Through ethnographic and indigenous contributions this volume penetrates the psychosocial aspects of the indigenous movement in the United States, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. It analyzes community-based reforms and shows how years of experience in adversity, peacemaking, and community preservation have equipped native peoples with skills they now wish to share for spiritual world healing.
KAYLEEN M. HAZLEHURST is Senior Lecturer in Cross-Cultural Studies in the Faculty of Arts at Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia./e She is the author of Political Expression and Ethnicity: Statecraft and Mobiliation in the Maori World (Praeger, 1993) and A Healing Place: Indigenous Visions of Personal Empowerment and Community Recovery (1994).