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Keeping Hold of Justice

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Keeping Hold of Justice Synopsis

Four of the Chief Investigators from the Minutes of Evidence project—which combines research, education, performance, and public engagement to spark new ways of understanding structural inequalities in settler societies like Australia—closely consider the law’s complex relation to the structural injustices of colonialism. This interdisciplinary book brings together the insights and approaches of history, criminology, socio-legal studies, and law to present a range of case studies of the encounter between law and colonialism. Through historical and contemporary case studies, it emphasizes the nature of colonialism as a structural injustice that becomes entrenched in the social, political, legal, and discursive structures of societies and continues to affect people’s lives in the present. It charts the role of law in both enabling and sustaining colonial injustice and in recognizing and redressing it. Despite the enduring legacies and harms of colonialism, Keeping Hold of Justice contends that possibilities for structural justice can be found thorough collaborative methodologies and practices that actively bring together different disciplines, peoples, temporalities, laws, and ways of knowing into dynamic relation. They reveal law not only as a source of colonial harm but also as a potential means of keeping hold of justice.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9780472131686
Publication date: 28th February 2020
Author: Jennifer Balint, Julie Evans, Nesam McMillan, Mark David McMillan
Publisher: The University of Michigan Press
Format: Hardback
Pagination: 218 pages
Series: Law, Meaning, And Violence
Genres: Colonialism and imperialism
Comparative politics
Constitutional and administrative law: general