Be honest, apologize, and give me my land back: how settler colonial states should reconcile with their indigenous peoples
Abstract
In order for a state to be legitimate vis-à-vis its citizens,
those citizens must be reasonably able to, minimally, trust that
it is both able and willing to create laws that are morally just.
For liberal theories of legitimacy, generally speaking, just
laws are laws that respect the individual rights of persons. The
settler colonial states of Australia and the United States have
throughout their history failed to respect the rights of
indigenous peoples qua individuals. There exists, then, a large
amount of evidence suggesting that it would be reasonable for
those peoples to not trusting those states. And, in so far as it
is reasonable for indigenous peoples of those states to not trust
that their respective states are able and willing to create just
laws for them, those states are illegitimate.
Given both the size, severity, and consistency of the wrongs
committed against indigenous peoples by their respective settler
colonial states it is not enough for those states to simply cease
in their wrongdoing. The states in question must engage in a
deliberate effort to generate the trust necessary for them to
become legitimate. Political reconciliation, aimed at addressing
the unique historical wrongs committed against indigenous
peoples, can begin to generate that trust. However, political
reconciliation alone will be insufficient. Given the substantial
amount of evidence against the settler colonial states, we would
be wrong in assuming a priori following reconciliation that they
would be capable of making just laws for their respective
indigenous citizens or willing to make such laws.
Moreover, reconciliation does not necessarily address the wrong
of failing to respect indigenous sovereignty. In order for that
wrong to be addressed, indigenous peoples must be able to
collectively secede. By choosing not to secede following
reconciliation, an indigenous people would signal that they do
trust their settler colonial state to make just laws for them,
and to that extent that it is legitimate.
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