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Indigenous Rights And Colonial Subjecthood Protection And Reform In The Nineteenthcentury British Empire Amanda Nettelbeck

  • SKU: BELL-36306224
Indigenous Rights And Colonial Subjecthood Protection And Reform In The Nineteenthcentury British Empire Amanda Nettelbeck
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Indigenous Rights And Colonial Subjecthood Protection And Reform In The Nineteenthcentury British Empire Amanda Nettelbeck instant download after payment.

Publisher: Cambridge University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 7.14 MB
Pages: 240
Author: Amanda Nettelbeck
ISBN: 9781108471756, 1108471757
Language: English
Year: 2019

Product desciption

Indigenous Rights And Colonial Subjecthood Protection And Reform In The Nineteenthcentury British Empire Amanda Nettelbeck by Amanda Nettelbeck 9781108471756, 1108471757 instant download after payment.

Amanda Nettelbeck explores how policies designed to protect the civil rights of indigenous peoples across the British Empire were entwined with reforming them as governable colonial subjects. The nineteenth-century policy of 'Aboriginal protection' has usually been seen as a fleeting initiative of imperial humanitarianism, yet it sat within a larger set of legally empowered policies for regulating new or newly-mobile colonised peoples. Protection policies drew colonised peoples within the embrace of the law, managed colonial labour needs, and set conditions on mobility. Within this comparative frame, Nettelbeck traces how the imperative to protect indigenous rights represented more than an obligation to mitigate the impacts of colonialism and dispossession. It carried a far-reaching agenda of legal reform that arose from the need to manage colonised peoples in an Empire where the demands of humane governance jostled with colonial growth.

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