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Enduring Indigeneity and Solidarity in Response to Australia's Carceral Colonialism

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 18:07 authored by Crystal McKinnon
This essay engages with Behrouz Boochani’s critical documentation of the Manus Island prison as part of Australian society. The current practices of detention and torture of refugees and asylum seekers need to be understood as part of the system that has been founded upon the violent theft of Indigenous lands, and one that continues to perpetrate ongoing colonial violence against Indigenous people. Considering the experiences of Indigenous people and asylum seekers together reveals the logics of Australian colonialism, which operate through, and are sustained by, white supremacy. In spite of these conditions, Indigeneity endures settler colonialism. One way that people exist, persist, and resist (Kauanui) is through building solidarity and undertaking actions that are grounded in, and center, Indigenous sovereignty.

History

Journal

Biography

Volume

43

Issue

4

Start page

691

End page

704

Total pages

14

Publisher

University of Hawai'i Press

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© The George and Marguerite Simson Biographical Research Center

Former Identifier

2006109725

Esploro creation date

2021-10-21

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