Aboriginal Women, Law and Critical Race Theory: Storytelling From The Margins
In: Palgrave Studies in Race, Ethnicity, Indigeneity and Criminal Justice
In: Springer eBook Collection
In: Palgrave studies in race, ethnicity, indigeneity and criminal justice
In: Palgrave Studies in Race, Ethnicity, Indigeneity and Criminal Justice
In: Springer eBook Collection
In: Palgrave Studies in Race, Ethnicity, Indigeneity and Criminal Justice Ser.
Intro -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- About the Author -- 1 Introduction -- Introduction -- 2 Critical Race Theory, Critical Race Feminism and the Stories of Outsiders -- Introduction -- Part One: Critical Race Theory -- Introduction -- Outsider Storytelling -- Part Two: Critical Race Feminism -- Introduction -- Black Women and Outlaw Culture -- Part Three: Commonalities Between the United States of America and Australia -- Introduction -- The Racial Hierarchy -- Short-Lived Peaks of Progress -- Racism Is Omnipresent -- Part Four: Australian CRT Scholarship -- Introduction -- The Pioneers of Australian CRT -- Conclusion -- 3 Outlaw Women: Emerging from Invisibility to Resistance -- Introduction -- Part One: Popular Representations of Indigenous Women -- Introduction -- Indigenous Women in Australian History -- Part Two: Indigenous Women's Outlaw Culture -- Introduction -- Operating Outside of the Law -- Caring for the Most Vulnerable -- Part Three: Indigenous Women and Legal Storytelling -- Introduction -- Absence of Voice -- Tuckiar v R -- Hales v Jamilmira -- Harnessing the Law -- Onus v Alcoa -- Roach v Electoral Commissioner -- Eatock v Bolt -- Conclusion -- 4 Eliza Woree: An Early Pioneer of Outlaw Culture -- Introduction -- Part One: Eliza's Childhood -- Introduction -- Life on the Northern Frontier -- Part Two: Eliza's Adulthood -- Introduction -- Employment -- Marriage -- Legal Existence -- Part Three: Deportation to Palm Island -- Life in Malay Town -- The Loss of Freedom -- Conclusion -- 5 Conclusion.
Problem melden