ABSTRACT

This book provides a comprehensive resource for accommodating and pursuing Indigenous perspectives in legal education.

The book is divided into three sections. The first section highlights the continuing issues that Indigenous people face in law schools and universities, including the ongoing impacts of colonisation and intergenerational trauma, institutional racism and exclusion. This section also includes chapters that explore arguments for the recognition of Indigenous legal knowledge and of the impact of settler law, and the incorporation of Indigenous concepts, laws and ways of thinking about settler law across the curriculum. The second section explores how Indigenous ways of reading and thinking about settler law make a difference to how settler law is understood and interpreted. Contributors consider the power of storytelling and address the prospect of law’s decolonisation. The third section of the book grapples with how traditional law school subjects can be taught through an Indigenous lens, including torts, public law, criminal law and sentencing, clinical legal education, and native title. Throughout, the book demonstrates the importance of, and offers practical advice for, teaching law in a way that includes critical Indigenous perspectives.

This book will be of enormous value to teachers, researchers, students in law, legal studies and Indigenous studies, and others with an interest in decolonising legal education.

The Open Access version of this book, available at www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license.

chapter 1|20 pages

Introduction

Title
Decolonising the Law School
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part I|82 pages

Recognising That Terra Nullius Never Left and Reimagining Law and Legal Education to Achieve Our Own Ends

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chapter 2|16 pages

Indigenous Lawyering

Title
Colonial Legal Formations and Decolonial Manoeuvres
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chapter 5|16 pages

‘Who Built This Fence?’

Title
Regenerating Faculty Landscapes for Lasting Education Reform
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part II|84 pages

Changing Thinking through Theory

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chapter 8|16 pages

Genre Outlaw

Title
Ruby Langford Ginibi
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chapter 10|18 pages

Decolonising the Common Law

Title
Beyond Colonial Thinking
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chapter 11|18 pages

Legal Education and First Nations Teaching and Learning Methodologies

Title
Storytelling/Yarning, Deep Listening and Lived Experience
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part III|94 pages

Applying an Indigenous Lens to Law School Curricula

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chapter 13|23 pages

Reflecting on the ‘General Part’ When There Is Systemic Injustice

Title
Do We Inadvertently Facilitate Overcriminalisation of First Peoples in Australia?
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chapter 16|17 pages

Native Title

Title
Steps Toward a Decolonised Law Curriculum
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