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Indigenous housing rights and colonial sovereignty: Self-determination and housing rights beyond a white possessive frame

By: Anthony, Thalia and Hohmann, Jessie.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Social & Legal Studies Description: 34(3), Jun, 2025: p.339-360.Subject(s): Housing, Self-determination, whiteness, Australian racism, First nations, Aboriginal, Indigenous, Northern territory intention, Social control, Human rights, Right to housing, United Nations declaration on the rights of indigenous peoples, UNDRIP In: Social & Legal StudiesSummary: Through the lens of Aileen Moreton-Robinson's ‘white possessive logics’, this article addresses a series of legal cases concerning inhumane Aboriginal housing in the Northern Territory of Australia. It critiques successive government policies in relation to First Nations people since the colonisation of the Northern Territory in the nineteenth century, setting the cases in their historical context of ongoing subordination of First Nations people to the interests of white possession of land and governance. We argue that domestic law pertaining to First Nations housing rights manifests white possessive logics. Such control can only be overcome through affording First Nations communities self-determination over housing in accordance with international law and First Nations claims. Self-determination and sovereignty are antidotes to the colonial histories that underlie inadequate housing for Indigenous peoples not only in Australia but across settler colonies. In developing this argument, we draw on international law and honour the advocacy of Northern Territory Aboriginal communities who have struggled for community-control over housing and homelands over successive generations.-Reproduced https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/09646639241227120
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Articles Articles Indian Institute of Public Administration
34(3), Jun, 2025: p.339-360 Available AR136684

Through the lens of Aileen Moreton-Robinson's ‘white possessive logics’, this article addresses a series of legal cases concerning inhumane Aboriginal housing in the Northern Territory of Australia. It critiques successive government policies in relation to First Nations people since the colonisation of the Northern Territory in the nineteenth century, setting the cases in their historical context of ongoing subordination of First Nations people to the interests of white possession of land and governance. We argue that domestic law pertaining to First Nations housing rights manifests white possessive logics. Such control can only be overcome through affording First Nations communities self-determination over housing in accordance with international law and First Nations claims. Self-determination and sovereignty are antidotes to the colonial histories that underlie inadequate housing for Indigenous peoples not only in Australia but across settler colonies. In developing this argument, we draw on international law and honour the advocacy of Northern Territory Aboriginal communities who have struggled for community-control over housing and homelands over successive generations.-Reproduced

https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/09646639241227120

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