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E-raamat: Indigenous Criminology

(University of Technology Sydney, Australia), (University of Wollongong)
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Indigenous Criminology is the first book to comprehensively explore Indigenous peoples contact with criminal justice systems in a contemporary and historical context. Drawing on comparative Indigenous material from North America, Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand, it



addresses both the theoretical underpinnings to the development of a specific Indigenous criminology, and canvasses the broader policy and practice implications for criminal justice.



Written by leading criminologists specialising in Indigenous justice issues, the book argues for the importance of Indigenous knowledges and methodologies to criminology, and suggests that colonialism needs to be a fundamental concept to criminology in order to understand contemporary problems such as deaths in custody, high imprisonment rates, police brutality and the high levels of violence in some Indigenous communities.



Prioritising the voices of Indigenous peoples, the work will make a significant contribution to the development of a decolonising criminology and will be of wide interest.

Arvustused

"A welcome contribution to the decolonization paradigm in Criminology, a discipline that is complicit in the enslavement, colonization, genocidization and criminalization of Others with repressive fetishes of western modernity." Biko Agozino, editor, African Journal of Criminology A major original contribution providing a valuable theoretical comparative perspective to the limits of traditional Western criminology by defying the status quo and giving Indigenous people a criminological voice. Stuart Henry, San Diego State University "Thoroughly researched, brilliantly argued, this powerful critique of mainstream criminology carves an elegant and welcome path to critical and responsive Indigenous-informed criminology." L. Jane McMillan, St. Francis Xavier University, Canada

About the authors vi
Acknowledgements vii
Preface viii
Professor Andrew Millie
one Introduction
1(22)
two Towards a critical Indigenous criminology
23(22)
three Understanding the impact of colonialism
45(22)
four Policing, Indigenous peoples and social order
67(22)
five Indigenous women and settler colonial crime control
89(22)
six Reconceptualising sentencing and punishment from an Indigenous perspective
111(22)
seven Indigenous peoples and the globalisation of crime control
133(18)
eight Critical issues in the development of an Indigenous criminology
151(14)
References 165(34)
Index 199
Chris Cunneen is Professor of Criminology at the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, University of NSW, Sydney, Australia. He has an international reputation as a leading criminologist specialising in Indigenous people and the law, juvenile justice, restorative justice, policing, prison issues and human rights. Chris has participated in a number of Australian Royal Commissions and Inquiries and with the federal Australian Human Rights Commission. He also holds a conjoint position with the Cairns Institute at James Cook University, Australia.















Juan Tauri is an Indigenous criminologist from Aotearoa (New Zealand). A graduate from the University of Cambridge, he is a critical commentator on criminal justice matters of importance to First Nations, including state responses, policy making, and media representation of crime and the Indigenous world. Juan has published widely and holds a visiting appointment at the University of Wollongong, Australia.