Legal Education Through an Indigenous Lens
Decolonising the Law School
Herausgeber: Watson, Nicole; Douglas, Heather
Legal Education Through an Indigenous Lens
Decolonising the Law School
Herausgeber: Watson, Nicole; Douglas, Heather
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This book provides a comprehensive resource for accommodating and pursuing Indigenous perspectives in legal education.
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This book provides a comprehensive resource for accommodating and pursuing Indigenous perspectives in legal education.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 302
- Erscheinungstermin: 4. Dezember 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 17mm
- Gewicht: 490g
- ISBN-13: 9781032753157
- ISBN-10: 1032753153
- Artikelnr.: 71665376
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Produktsicherheitsverantwortliche/r
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 302
- Erscheinungstermin: 4. Dezember 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 17mm
- Gewicht: 490g
- ISBN-13: 9781032753157
- ISBN-10: 1032753153
- Artikelnr.: 71665376
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Produktsicherheitsverantwortliche/r
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Nicole Watson is a Mununjali and Birri Gubba woman from south-east Queensland. She is Professor of Law at the University of Technology Sydney (UTS), Australia. Heather Douglas, whose heritage is Scottish and Irish, is Professor of Law at The University of Melbourne, Australia.
1. Introduction: Decolonising the Law School Heather Douglas and Nicole
Watson Part One: Recognising that Terra Nullius Never Left, and Reimagining
Law and Legal Education to Achieve our Own Ends 2. Indigenous Lawyering:
Colonial Legal Formations and Decolonial Manoeuvres Osca Monaghan 3.
Evidence Given by Eddie Cubillo to the Yoorrook Justice Commission Eddie
Cubillo and Jaynaya Dwyer 4. The Shackles of Terra Nullius in Child
Protection 'Reforms' Terri Libesman, Paul Gray and Kirsten Gray 5. 'Who
Built this Fence?' Regenerating Faculty Landscapes for Lasting Educational
Reform Simon Young and Kirstie Smith 6. Challenges and Strategies for
Incorporating Indigenous Laws and Histories Across Legal Education
Curriculum Annette Gainsford, Alison Gerard and Emma Colvin Part Two:
Changing Thinking through Theory 7. Storytelling - The Power of First
Nations Jurisprudence Larissa Behrendt 8. Genre Outlaw: Ruby Langford
Ginibi Suvendrini Perera 9. Relationality as Indigenous Teaching Praxis in
Legal Education Marcelle Burns 10. Decolonising the Common Law: Beyond
Colonial Thinking Pekeri Ruska and Jennifer Nielsen 11. Legal Education and
First Nations Teaching and Learning Methodologies: Storytelling/Yarning,
Deep Listening, and Lived Experience Narelle Bedford Part Three: Applying
an Indigenous Lens to Law School Curricula 12. Teaching Students to
Appreciate the Significance of the Plaintiff's Aboriginality in Intentional
Torts Cases Nicole Watson 13. Reflecting on the 'General Part' When There
is Systemic Injustice: Do we Inadvertently Facilitate Overcriminalisation
of First Peoples in Australia? Mary Spiers Williams 14. What's Aristotle's
Totem Anyway? Indigenous Systems of Law and Governance and the Australian
Public Law Curriculum Aurora Milroy and Karinda Burns 15. Unsettling
Australian Clinical Legal Education Amanda Porter and Eddie Cubillo 16.
Native Title: Steps Toward a Decolonised Law Curriculum Lee Godden
Watson Part One: Recognising that Terra Nullius Never Left, and Reimagining
Law and Legal Education to Achieve our Own Ends 2. Indigenous Lawyering:
Colonial Legal Formations and Decolonial Manoeuvres Osca Monaghan 3.
Evidence Given by Eddie Cubillo to the Yoorrook Justice Commission Eddie
Cubillo and Jaynaya Dwyer 4. The Shackles of Terra Nullius in Child
Protection 'Reforms' Terri Libesman, Paul Gray and Kirsten Gray 5. 'Who
Built this Fence?' Regenerating Faculty Landscapes for Lasting Educational
Reform Simon Young and Kirstie Smith 6. Challenges and Strategies for
Incorporating Indigenous Laws and Histories Across Legal Education
Curriculum Annette Gainsford, Alison Gerard and Emma Colvin Part Two:
Changing Thinking through Theory 7. Storytelling - The Power of First
Nations Jurisprudence Larissa Behrendt 8. Genre Outlaw: Ruby Langford
Ginibi Suvendrini Perera 9. Relationality as Indigenous Teaching Praxis in
Legal Education Marcelle Burns 10. Decolonising the Common Law: Beyond
Colonial Thinking Pekeri Ruska and Jennifer Nielsen 11. Legal Education and
First Nations Teaching and Learning Methodologies: Storytelling/Yarning,
Deep Listening, and Lived Experience Narelle Bedford Part Three: Applying
an Indigenous Lens to Law School Curricula 12. Teaching Students to
Appreciate the Significance of the Plaintiff's Aboriginality in Intentional
Torts Cases Nicole Watson 13. Reflecting on the 'General Part' When There
is Systemic Injustice: Do we Inadvertently Facilitate Overcriminalisation
of First Peoples in Australia? Mary Spiers Williams 14. What's Aristotle's
Totem Anyway? Indigenous Systems of Law and Governance and the Australian
Public Law Curriculum Aurora Milroy and Karinda Burns 15. Unsettling
Australian Clinical Legal Education Amanda Porter and Eddie Cubillo 16.
Native Title: Steps Toward a Decolonised Law Curriculum Lee Godden
1. Introduction: Decolonising the Law School Heather Douglas and Nicole
Watson Part One: Recognising that Terra Nullius Never Left, and Reimagining
Law and Legal Education to Achieve our Own Ends 2. Indigenous Lawyering:
Colonial Legal Formations and Decolonial Manoeuvres Osca Monaghan 3.
Evidence Given by Eddie Cubillo to the Yoorrook Justice Commission Eddie
Cubillo and Jaynaya Dwyer 4. The Shackles of Terra Nullius in Child
Protection 'Reforms' Terri Libesman, Paul Gray and Kirsten Gray 5. 'Who
Built this Fence?' Regenerating Faculty Landscapes for Lasting Educational
Reform Simon Young and Kirstie Smith 6. Challenges and Strategies for
Incorporating Indigenous Laws and Histories Across Legal Education
Curriculum Annette Gainsford, Alison Gerard and Emma Colvin Part Two:
Changing Thinking through Theory 7. Storytelling - The Power of First
Nations Jurisprudence Larissa Behrendt 8. Genre Outlaw: Ruby Langford
Ginibi Suvendrini Perera 9. Relationality as Indigenous Teaching Praxis in
Legal Education Marcelle Burns 10. Decolonising the Common Law: Beyond
Colonial Thinking Pekeri Ruska and Jennifer Nielsen 11. Legal Education and
First Nations Teaching and Learning Methodologies: Storytelling/Yarning,
Deep Listening, and Lived Experience Narelle Bedford Part Three: Applying
an Indigenous Lens to Law School Curricula 12. Teaching Students to
Appreciate the Significance of the Plaintiff's Aboriginality in Intentional
Torts Cases Nicole Watson 13. Reflecting on the 'General Part' When There
is Systemic Injustice: Do we Inadvertently Facilitate Overcriminalisation
of First Peoples in Australia? Mary Spiers Williams 14. What's Aristotle's
Totem Anyway? Indigenous Systems of Law and Governance and the Australian
Public Law Curriculum Aurora Milroy and Karinda Burns 15. Unsettling
Australian Clinical Legal Education Amanda Porter and Eddie Cubillo 16.
Native Title: Steps Toward a Decolonised Law Curriculum Lee Godden
Watson Part One: Recognising that Terra Nullius Never Left, and Reimagining
Law and Legal Education to Achieve our Own Ends 2. Indigenous Lawyering:
Colonial Legal Formations and Decolonial Manoeuvres Osca Monaghan 3.
Evidence Given by Eddie Cubillo to the Yoorrook Justice Commission Eddie
Cubillo and Jaynaya Dwyer 4. The Shackles of Terra Nullius in Child
Protection 'Reforms' Terri Libesman, Paul Gray and Kirsten Gray 5. 'Who
Built this Fence?' Regenerating Faculty Landscapes for Lasting Educational
Reform Simon Young and Kirstie Smith 6. Challenges and Strategies for
Incorporating Indigenous Laws and Histories Across Legal Education
Curriculum Annette Gainsford, Alison Gerard and Emma Colvin Part Two:
Changing Thinking through Theory 7. Storytelling - The Power of First
Nations Jurisprudence Larissa Behrendt 8. Genre Outlaw: Ruby Langford
Ginibi Suvendrini Perera 9. Relationality as Indigenous Teaching Praxis in
Legal Education Marcelle Burns 10. Decolonising the Common Law: Beyond
Colonial Thinking Pekeri Ruska and Jennifer Nielsen 11. Legal Education and
First Nations Teaching and Learning Methodologies: Storytelling/Yarning,
Deep Listening, and Lived Experience Narelle Bedford Part Three: Applying
an Indigenous Lens to Law School Curricula 12. Teaching Students to
Appreciate the Significance of the Plaintiff's Aboriginality in Intentional
Torts Cases Nicole Watson 13. Reflecting on the 'General Part' When There
is Systemic Injustice: Do we Inadvertently Facilitate Overcriminalisation
of First Peoples in Australia? Mary Spiers Williams 14. What's Aristotle's
Totem Anyway? Indigenous Systems of Law and Governance and the Australian
Public Law Curriculum Aurora Milroy and Karinda Burns 15. Unsettling
Australian Clinical Legal Education Amanda Porter and Eddie Cubillo 16.
Native Title: Steps Toward a Decolonised Law Curriculum Lee Godden