Caring for Country as Deliberative Policymaking
Date
2023
Authors
McCaul, Justin
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Springer Singapore
Abstract
This volume is driven by a question over whether public policy, rendered
as ‘Indigenous affairs’, can be motivated by Indigenous futurity, rather than the eliminatory desire of settler colonialism. The project of securing a future for settlers is
always predicated on the replacement of Indigenous peoples and the theft of Indigenous land; the reality that ‘Indigenous affairs’ largely does not elevate Indigenous
rights and wellbeing suggests that the settler state is in fact achieving what it sets
out to do. ‘Indigenous affairs’—as a mode of colonial governance—problematises
the Indigenous subject in order to incapacitate Indigenous collectivities. The history
of state ‘failure’—of targets missed, of underfunding, of violence, of racism, of
precarity—does not manifest as a surprising and unintended consequence of colonial
policy. Political contests are fought over the future as much as they are determined by
the past, and so the practice of failure simply moves the desired state of Indigenous
vanishment back in time to the present. A particular version of an Indigenous future
is always present in settler colonial Indigenous policy, and this is and always has
been fought by Indigenous peoples who have a different relationship with both the
past and the present.
Description
Keywords
Social policy, Governance, Decolonization, Self-determination, Closing the gap
Citation
Collections
Source
Type
Book chapter
Book Title
Public Policy and Indigenous Futures
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
2099-12-31