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» The Neoliberal State, Recognition and Indigenous Rights
The Neoliberal State, Recognition and Indigenous Rights
- First Page
- Preliminary pages
- List of figures
- List of tables
- List of abbreviations
- Contributors
- Preface
- 1. From new paternalism to new imaginings of possibilities in Australia, Canada and Aotearoa/New Zealand: Indigenous rights and recognition and the state in the neoliberal age
- Part 1: The connection between the act of governing, policy and neoliberalism
- 2. Privatisation and dispossession in the name of indigenous women’s rights
- 3. Resisting the ascendancy of an emboldened colonialism
- 4. A flawed Treaty partner: The New Zealand state, local government and the politics of recognition
- 5. Expressions of Indigenous rights and self-determination from the ground up: A Yawuru example
- Part 2: Pendulums and contradictions in neoliberalism governing everything from Indigenous disadvantage to Indigenous economic development in Australia
- 6. Missing ATSIC: Australia’s need for a strong Indigenous representative body
- 7. Neoliberalising disability income reform: What does this mean for Indigenous Australians living in regional areas?
- 8. Indigenous peoples, neoliberalism and the state: A retreat from rights to ‘responsibilisation’ via the cashless welfare card
- 9. Ideology vs context in the neoliberal state’s management of remote Indigenous housing reform
- 10. Fragile positions in the new paternalism: Indigenous community organisations during the ‘Advancement’ era in Australia
- 11. The tyranny of neoliberal public management and the challenge for Aboriginal community organisations
- 12. Aboriginal organisations, self-determination and the neoliberal age: A case study of how the ‘game has changed’ for Aboriginal organisations in Newcastle
- Part 3: The dynamic relationship Māori have had with simultaneously resisting, manipulating and working with neoliberalism in New Zealand
- 13. Māori, the state and self-determination in the neoliberal age
- 14. Indigenous peoples embedded in neoliberal governance: Has the Māori Party achieved its social policy goals in New Zealand?
- 15. Indigenous settlements and market environmentalism: An untimely coincidence?
- 16. Māori political and economic recognition in a diverse economy
- CAEPR Research Monograph Series
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