Governance and Multiculturalism 2019
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-23740-0_3
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The (White) Elephant in the Room: Cultural Identities and Indigenous Sovereignty in Australia

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Cited by 4 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Originating in South America, the concept of racial democracy (Ferreira, 2011) has significance for Australian education where standards and accountability frameworks naturalise whiteness as a norm against which 'others' are judged (Lucashenko, 2017;Moreton-Robinson et al, 2012). The myth of racial democracy allows Australia's majority 'White' teaching force to remain largely blind to these racialised inequalities, whilst multiculturalist and meritocratic discourses reinforce the idea that anyone can achieve if they just work hard enough (Koerner & Pillay, 2020). This 'bootstrap' version of educational equality thus maintains racialised inequality.…”
Section: Margaret Lovell and Samantha Schulzmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Originating in South America, the concept of racial democracy (Ferreira, 2011) has significance for Australian education where standards and accountability frameworks naturalise whiteness as a norm against which 'others' are judged (Lucashenko, 2017;Moreton-Robinson et al, 2012). The myth of racial democracy allows Australia's majority 'White' teaching force to remain largely blind to these racialised inequalities, whilst multiculturalist and meritocratic discourses reinforce the idea that anyone can achieve if they just work hard enough (Koerner & Pillay, 2020). This 'bootstrap' version of educational equality thus maintains racialised inequality.…”
Section: Margaret Lovell and Samantha Schulzmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Within international relations, sovereignty is central to the relationship between territorial states and their different procedures of authority (Agnew, 1995;Barkin, 1998). But geographers have shown how more diverse form of power and articulations of territory are at play through focus on sovereign regimes, spatial metaphors, debates about power, the body and Indigenous sovereignty (Bauder and Mueller, 2021;Koerner and Pillay, 2020;Mountz, 2013;Shrinkhal, 2021;Wildcat and De Leon, 2020). A surge in interest in the concept of sovereignty has underscored that sovereignty and its relationship to territory has been and can be understood differently through culture and practice.…”
Section: Questioning Sovereigntymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A treaty has never been made between Indigenous people in Australia and the state, and so it is argued by Indigenous people that sovereignty has never been ceded. Indigenous people are asserting their sovereignty in the face of ongoing harms and injustices, while also taking issue with its definition and the terms of engagement (Bauder and Mueller, 2021;Koerner and Pillay, 2020;Lee et al, 2020;Moreton-Robinson, 2020). For example, Sheryl Lightfoot (2016) argues that Indigenous definitions of sovereignty are different from those conventionally conceived because they do not necessarily include defined territories or states with authority.…”
Section: Questioning Sovereigntymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Across the globe, communication has increased in scale and speed, therefore, communicative competence is required in order to avoid misunderstanding arising from differing cultural identities, expectations, diverging beliefs, values and language use (Cameron, Lee, Anderson, Trachtenberg & Chang, 2020).In Inter-cultural communication, people from different countries and cultural identities (CI) act, communicate and perceive the world around them (Koerner & Pillay, 2020). It takes place across different cultural identities and social groups; within an organization, institute or social set up, made up of individuals from different religious, social, ethnic, and educational backgrounds (Little, 2020;Barros & Albert, 2020).…”
Section: Critical Appraisal Of Literature 21 Inter Cultural Communica...mentioning
confidence: 99%