Indigenous Sovereignty and the Democratic Project

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Liberal democracies are predicated on popular sovereignty - the ideal of government for and by the People. Throughout the developed world indigenous peoples continue to deny legitimacy to otherwise popular governments because their consent has never been sought. Using examples from Australia, New Zealand, Canada and the USA, this book tackles the problem of democratic legitimation from the perspective of indigenous peoples, arguing that having suffered conquest, these people cannot be said to consent until conditions for their consent have been realised. These conditions include constitutional change that recognizes indigenous law as the 'law of the land' - a radical proposal going far beyond the current limits of self-determination.

Author(s): Steven Curry
Publisher: Routledge/Ashgate
Year: 2022

Language: English
Pages: 191
City: London

Cover
Half Title
Dedication
Title
Copyright
Contents
Series Preface
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Part One: Nations Within
1 We are only Demanding our Country
2 Playing with the Umpire
Part Two: Long Live the King!
3 Long Live the King!
4 The Act of State
5 State and Nation
Part Three: Born to Rule
6 We the People
7 Imagining the People
8 The Appeal to Heaven
9 Born to Rule
Part Four: Indigenous Sovereignty
10 Applications and Limitations
11 On a New Republic
Bibliography
Index
Cases and Legislation