✨ New Arrivals Just Dropped!Explore
HomeStore

Recognise what? edited by Gary Johns

Product image 1

Recognise what? edited by Gary Johns

Recognise what? edited by Gary Johns


ISBN: 9781925138238

Paperback,  118 pages

Published in 2014
Price: $22.95

Four Aboriginal writers are worried about proposals for Aboriginal recognition in the Constitution. Australians should read these, and the other distinguished essays in this volume, before they embark on this venture.

Wesley Aird : Anything more than a simple statement of historical fact risks the process being jeopardised by ‘blackfella politics’.

Anthony Dillon : The many thousands of happy, successful Aboriginal people, who are flourishing despite the lack of constitutional recognition of culture, are surely evidence that such recognition is not needed.

Kerryn Pholi : The inclusion of clauses that pledge ‘respect for Aboriginal cultures, languages and heritage’ … could create conditions in which a person with a long-ago Aboriginal ancestor may … find it legally advantageous to cultivate a claim of Aboriginal identity.

Dallas Scott :
Constitutional recognition is an exercise in futility. Unlike the resounding result achieved in 1967 that allowed native Australians to be counted in the Census, and to have laws made on their behalf, there is no urgency or importance attached to the present undertaking.
$211.36

Original: $704.53

-70%
Recognise what? edited by Gary Johns

$704.53

$211.36

Product Information

Shipping & Returns

Description

Recognise what? edited by Gary Johns


ISBN: 9781925138238

Paperback,  118 pages

Published in 2014
Price: $22.95

Four Aboriginal writers are worried about proposals for Aboriginal recognition in the Constitution. Australians should read these, and the other distinguished essays in this volume, before they embark on this venture.

Wesley Aird : Anything more than a simple statement of historical fact risks the process being jeopardised by ‘blackfella politics’.

Anthony Dillon : The many thousands of happy, successful Aboriginal people, who are flourishing despite the lack of constitutional recognition of culture, are surely evidence that such recognition is not needed.

Kerryn Pholi : The inclusion of clauses that pledge ‘respect for Aboriginal cultures, languages and heritage’ … could create conditions in which a person with a long-ago Aboriginal ancestor may … find it legally advantageous to cultivate a claim of Aboriginal identity.

Dallas Scott :
Constitutional recognition is an exercise in futility. Unlike the resounding result achieved in 1967 that allowed native Australians to be counted in the Census, and to have laws made on their behalf, there is no urgency or importance attached to the present undertaking.

You may also like

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1

The Trouble with Elites : Elitism and the anti-democratic impulse by Richard Alston

$774.98

$232.49

NEW
Thumbnail 1

The Australian Achievement and its Opponents by Scott Hargreaves

$915.89

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Pell Contra Mundum edited by Robert A. Sirico

$1,127.25

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Speech : The Power of Persuasion; Selected Speeches of Brendan Nelson

$1,268.16

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Women that hate men : essays on misandry by Vanessa de Largie

$915.89

$274.77

NEW
Thumbnail 1

A Duty to Offend : Selected Essays by Brendan O’Neill

$774.98

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Australia : What Went Right? What Went Wrong? by Anthony G. Percy

$704.53

$211.36

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1

The Parallel University : Create a balanced life and have it all by Richard Krohn

$915.89

$274.77

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Fragile Nation : Vulnerability, Resilience and Victimhood by Tanveer Ahmed

$915.89

$274.77

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Those Annoying Christmas Letters and Other Writings by Garth Paltridge

$634.08

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Thoroughly Modern Patriot : Australia, the Monarchy and the Fair Fight by Sean Jacobs

$634.08

$190.22