TY - JOUR
T1 - Beyond Narratives of Aboriginal Self-deliverance
T2 - Land Rights and Anthropological Visibility in the Australian Public Domain
AU - Peterson, Nicolas
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The University of Western Australia.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - The central role that anthropologists play in Aboriginal land and native title claims is becoming less visible. In some ways, this is not surprising since minorities that need the help of others, if they are seeking recognition of their rights, are often uncomfortable being the beneficiaries of assistance, and the narratives they come to cherish are those of self-deliverance. However, the public discourses in which anthropology is involved also contribute to this decreasing visibility, particularly because the most important of them is the technical discourse that comes with being an expert witness in land and native title claims, where the contribution of lawyers and the law have a higher profile. A third factor is that for those people Emma Kowal (2015) calls white anti-racist, a category into which many anthropologists might be thought to fall, self-effacement is a foundational value, so that any contribution to improving Aboriginal circumstances should be obscured. But is that how anthropologists and the beneficiaries of this assistance think?.
AB - The central role that anthropologists play in Aboriginal land and native title claims is becoming less visible. In some ways, this is not surprising since minorities that need the help of others, if they are seeking recognition of their rights, are often uncomfortable being the beneficiaries of assistance, and the narratives they come to cherish are those of self-deliverance. However, the public discourses in which anthropology is involved also contribute to this decreasing visibility, particularly because the most important of them is the technical discourse that comes with being an expert witness in land and native title claims, where the contribution of lawyers and the law have a higher profile. A third factor is that for those people Emma Kowal (2015) calls white anti-racist, a category into which many anthropologists might be thought to fall, self-effacement is a foundational value, so that any contribution to improving Aboriginal circumstances should be obscured. But is that how anthropologists and the beneficiaries of this assistance think?.
KW - Anthropologists and lawyers
KW - land claims
KW - remote communities
KW - self-deliverance
KW - white anti-racists
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85134516015&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/00664677.2022.2084716
DO - 10.1080/00664677.2022.2084716
M3 - Article
SN - 0066-4677
VL - 32
SP - 125
EP - 137
JO - Anthropological Forum
JF - Anthropological Forum
IS - 2
ER -