The Digital Divide in Australia: Is Rural Australia Loosing Out?
In: Information Technology and Social Justice, S. 240-261
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In: Information Technology and Social Justice, S. 240-261
In: Comparing Environmental Policies in 16 Countries, S. 125-162
In: The Continuity of Legal Systems in Theory and Practice
In: Government Communication : Cases and challenges
In: Education in Australia, New Zealand and the Pacific
In: Providing Agri-environmental Public Goods through Collective Action, S. 131-142
In: Cutting Red Tape; From Red Tape to Smart Tape, S. 73-109
In: Political Parties in Advanced Industrial Democracies, S. 379-408
In: Veröffentlichungen des Instituts für Deutsches, Europäisches und Internationales Medizinrecht, Gesundheitsrecht und Bioethik der Universitäten Heidelberg und Mannheim; Das Menschenrechtsübereinkommen zur Biomedizin des Europarates — taugliches Vorbild für eine weltweit geltende Regelung? / The Convention on Human Rights and Biomedicine of the Council of Europe — a Suitable Model for World-Wide Regulation?, S. 261-287
In: Veröffentlichungen des Instituts für Deutsches, Europäisches und Internationales Medizinrecht, Gesundheitsrecht und Bioethik der Universitäten Heidelberg und Mannheim; Zivilrechtliche Regelungen zur Absicherung der Patientenautonomie am Ende des Lebens / Regulations of Civil Law to Safeguard the Autonomy of Patients at the End of Their Life, S. 65-133
In: The Sins of the Nation and the Ritual of Apologies, S. 171-214
In: The Handbook of International School Psychology, S. 15-28
In: The Historiography of Genocide, S. 128-155
In: The Palgrave Handbook of EU-Asia Relations, S. 603-617
Argues that the racialized Aboriginal citizen recognized in the Australian Constitution is no way a curative for the absence of the Aborigine for the first 60 years of the 20th century. Contending that Australian nationhood was founded on racism, the history of this tradition is traced. Much attention is given to chronicling Aborigine disenfranchisement & citizenship & the constitutional, legislative, & legal dimensions of this. In light of the persistent inferior status of Aboriginal Australians, a call is made for formal racism to be excised from the Constitution & that the pre-existing Aborigine nations be recognized. J. Zendejas