Ben (Postdoctoral Research Fellow, School of History, Australian National University) Silverstein 
Governing Natives 
Indirect Rule and Settler Colonialism in Australia’s North

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In the 1930s, a series of crises transformed relationships between settlers and Aboriginal people in Australia’s Northern Territory. By the late 1930s, Australian settlers were coming to understand the Northern Territory as a colonial formation requiring a new form of government. Responding to crises of social reproduction, public power, and legitimacy, they re-thought the scope of settler colonial government by drawing on both the art of indirect rule and on a representational economy of Indigenous elimination to develop a new political dispensation that sought to incorporate and consume Indigenous production and sovereignties. This book locates Aboriginal history within imperial history, situating the settler colonial politics of Indigeneity in a broader governmental context. — .
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Format PDF ● Pages 256 ● ISBN 9781526100054 ● Publisher Manchester University Press ● Published 2018 ● Downloadable 3 times ● Currency EUR ● ID 8122063 ● Copy protection Adobe DRM
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