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999 _c10579
_d10579
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008 200910b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _acountry, tebrakunna
_930015
245 _aReset the relationship’: decolonising government to increase Indigenous benefit
260 _bSage,
_c2019.
300 _aVol 26, Issue 4, 2019:( 415-434)
520 _aAboriginal Tasmanian peoples have been characterised by extinction myths as an outcome of colonialism. The subsequent dispossession and exile from lands and seas for surviving communities have increased trauma. This article analyses the recent efforts of Aboriginal Tasmanian peoples to reframe relationships with the Tasmanian Government and create conditions for our emancipation away from colonial harms. To decolonise political negotiating environments and inject Indigenous-led strategies of ‘love-bombing’ that reflect cultural processes of kinship and reciprocity, we reset the relationship for good governance. Two case studies of Tasmanian land and sea management illustrate how an Indigenous politic has been created for reclaiming identity among shared futures.
650 _aextinction
_930016
650 _aIndigenous
_929945
650 _aland and sea
_930017
650 _aTasmania
_930018
650 _awomen
_929242
700 _a Lee, Emma
_930019
773 0 _010528
_915377
_dSage publisher 2019
_tCultural geographies
856 _uhttps://doi.org/10.1177/1474474019842891
942 _2ddc
_cART