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Indigenous Self-Rule publishes cutting-edge research that considers the potential of Indigenous authorities to transform colonial legacies and support the self-determination of Indigenous collectives. Books in this series showcase diverse governance technologies designed by Indigenous leaders to address contemporary political contexts; meet their enduring rights and responsibilities as First Nations’ citizens; and protect cultural and economic interests in ancient ecologies of traditional occupation and use, now ravaged by resource extraction and threatened by climate change. Prioritising works by Indigenous authors and Indigenous-participant teams, Indigenous Self-Rule attends critically to settler-colonialism in the contexts of Australia, Aotearoa-New Zealand and other nations of the Southern Pacific Rim, the United States, Canada, Israel/Palestine, and the Sápmi territories of the northern Arctic Circle. Indigenous Self-Rule aims to publish important new research that engages the transformative potential of cross-cultural interaction, collaboration and agreement-making to successfully mediate culturally diverse political interests and values in settler-colonial situations. It contributes new thinking about the reparation of historical injustice and the terms and future conditions of positive coexistence after decolonization.
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