Reparations as justice: provocations for policy, regulation and law

Presented by ANU College of Law, Governance & Policy

This paper provokes questions of justice for scholars and practitioners working in policy, regulation and law by returning to reparations in anti-colonial thought and practice.

Much of the global reparations debate on colonisation and slavery has focused on important demands confronting the historic damages and ongoing accumulation of disadvantage from colonization in ex-colonies or from plantation slavery. Much less has been said about reparations for settler colonialism which is a specific form of ongoing colonization in the here and now.

Drawing on long-standing work around reparations for colonisation by Indigenous peoples in Australia, and the limited compensatory responses the state and judiciary have offered, this paper considers reparations as the critical domain of transformation that aim less to offset damage and reconcile suffering, but rather to comprehensively transform colonial relations in Australia.

Ultimately, this paper returns to the vast community and activist scholarship on reparations for colonisation, genocide and slavery in Australia and beyond, which offers ways of thinking, being and doing towards justice.

About the speaker

Dr is an Associate Professor of Public Policy at the Crawford School at the 鶹ýAV National University. Her research is situated in the intersections (and cracks) of development, social policy, de(coloniality) and care.

COVID protocols

The ANU strongly encourages you to keep a mask with you at all times (for use when COVID-19 safe behaviours are not practicable) and to be respectful of colleagues, students and visitors who may wish to continue to wear one. Please continue to practice good hygiene. If you are unwell, please stay home. The ACT government’s COVID Smart behaviours can be accessed .

This seminar presentation is a dual-delivery event. Registration is not required for in-person attendance as neither the ANU nor ACT Health conduct contact tracing.

If you require accessibility accommodations or a visitor Personal Emergency Evacuation Plan please email regnet.communications@anu.edu.au.

Image credit: Image of sign from Invasion Day protest 2021: “Imagine not paying rent for 233 years!”, by  from , used under .

Date and Times

Location

Seminar Room 1.04, Coombs Extension Building

Acton, ACT, 2600

Speakers

Contact