The Social Construction of Indigenous `Native Title' Land Rights in Australia
- Damien Short
- Roehampton University, d.short@roehampton.ac.uk
Source
doi: 10.1177/0011392107081989 Current Sociology November 2007 vol. 55 no. 6 857-876
Abstract
Legal scholars and political theorists
dominate academic writing on the issue of indigenous peoples' rights.
This article,
however, adopts a sociological approach, analysing
indigenous rights in Australia as a socially constructed phenomenon, the
product of ideals, entrenched colonial structures
and the balance of power between political interests. It shows how,
during
rights institutionalization processes, ably aided
by a receptive government and media, commercial lobby groups constructed
propaganda campaigns to further their interests to
the detriment of indigenous interests. The resultant legislation was an
exercise in rights limitation behind a veneer of
agrarian reform. The article concludes by highlighting the tension
between
national rights regimes of this nature and
international human rights norms and suggests an approach that could
overcome this
problem.
Keywords
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