ABSTRACT

The dispossession of indigenous peoples by conquest regimes remains a pressing issue. This book, unlike most other books on the subject, contrasts two different colonial administrations – first the Chinese Qing Empire, then, from 1895, the Japanese. It shows how, under the Chinese legal system, the Qing employed the Chinese legal system to manage the relationship between the increasing numbers of Han Chinese settlers and the indigenous peoples, and how, although the Qing regime refrained from taking actions to transform aboriginal land tenure, nevertheless Chinese settlers were able to manipulate aboriginal land tenure to their advantage. It goes on to examine the very different approach of the Japanese colonial administration, which following the Meiji Restoration of 1868 had begun to adopt a Western legal framework, demonstrating how this was intentionally much more intrusive, and how the Japanese modernized legal framework significantly disrupted aboriginal land tenure. Based on extensive original research, the book provides important insights into colonisation, different legal traditions and the impact of colonial settlement on indigenous peoples.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|27 pages

Land settlement

Progression and pattern

chapter 2|33 pages

Settlement policies

Reluctant expansion

chapter 3|41 pages

Aboriginal land

Recognition and protection

chapter 4|32 pages

Chinese practice

Transforming aboriginal land tenure

chapter 5|34 pages

Aborigines’ efforts

A losing battle

chapter 6|32 pages

Japanese colonisation

New tenure under the modern law

chapter |6 pages

Conclusion

Land tenure, colonisation and legal tradition