Results for ' Philosophy, Aboriginal Australian'

974 found
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  1.  26
    Articles, by title.Randall Everett, Australian Aboriginal, Torres Strait & Peter Dunbar-Hall - 2003 - Philosophy of Music Education Review 11 (1):671-672.
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  2. Elements of Australian aboriginal philosophy.A. P. Elkin - 1969 - Oceania 40:85-98.
  3.  16
    Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Musics in the Curriculum: Political, Educational, and Cultural Perspectives.Peter Dunbar-Hall - forthcoming - Philosophy of Music Education Review 10 (1):18-26.
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  4. Name/Place Index.Australian Aborigines, Lewis Binford, Franz Boas, Francois Bordes, Erika Bourguignon, Geoff Clarke, Charles Darwin, John Dewey, Diane Freedman & Derek Freeman - 2008 - In Philip Carl Salzman & Patricia C. Rice (eds.), Thinking anthropologically: a practical guide for students. Upper Saddle River, N.J.: Pearson Prentice Hall. pp. 119.
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  5.  32
    Dream-Time Law: Australian Aborigine Philosophy.Michael W. Fox - 1987 - Between the Species 3 (2):9.
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  6.  42
    (1 other version)National Identity, Multiculturalism, and Aboriginal Rights: An Australian Perspective.Ross Poole - 1996 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy, Supplementary Volume 22:407-438.
  7.  94
    Culture Crisis: Anthropology and Politics in Aboriginal Australia.Jon C. Altman & Melinda Hickson (eds.) - 2010 - University of New South Wales Press.
    In 2007 th eAustralian government declared that remote Aboriginal communities were in crisis and launched the Northern Territory Intervention.
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  8.  62
    The Uncanny Child of Australian Nationhood: Nostalgia as a Critical Tool in Conceptualizing Social Change.Joanne Faulkner - 2014 - Symposium: Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy/Revue canadienne de philosophie continentale 18 (2):125-148.
    Nostalgic, socially privileged ideals of childhood have actively contributed to the formation of Australian national identity, as well as modern subject-formations more broadly. This paper argues that, while such nostalgia has been drawn on for normative ends—in the service of the management of the modern individual—nostalgia also has the power to disrupt our conceptions of the normal. In the context of the contemporary “crisis” of childhood particularly, opportunities to reconstitute ideals of “childhood” and “family” differently have become available to (...)
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  9.  14
    John Chesterman and Brain Galligan, Citizens Without Rights: Aborigines and Australian Citizenship AND Nicolas Peterson and Will Sanders, eds., Citizenship and Indigenous Australians: Changing Conceptions and Possibilities.J. T. Levy - 2000 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 78 (3):418-420.
  10.  40
    Sand talk: how Indigenous thinking can save the world.Tyson Yunkaporta - 2019 - Melbourne, Victoria: Text Publishing.
    This remarkable book is about everything from echidnas to evolution, cosmology to cooking, sex and science and spirits to Schrodinger's cat. Tyson Yunkaporta looks at global systems from an Indigenous perspective. He asks how contemporary life diverges from the pattern of creation. How does this affect us? How can we do things differently? Sand Talk provides a template for living. It's about how lines and symbols and shapes can help us make sense of the world. It's about how we learn (...)
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  11.  5
    Right story, wrong story.Tyson Yunkaporta - 2023 - Melbourne, Victoria, Australia: The Text Publishing Company.
    The wrong canoe -- Belongings: can I keep all my stuff in the anthropocene? -- Rite of return -- The tree that kills you back -- Culture with a chainsaw -- Big crazy manic frog -- Bee the change -- The riddle of steel -- You're it -- Wrong lines -- Twelve rules for avoiding lists of rules in the athropocene -- Birds.
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  12.  8
    Myths and Legends of the Australian Aboriginals. [REVIEW]Raymond Firth - 1931 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 9 (3):231.
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  13.  20
    Transcending race: Further reflections on Australian Aboriginal culture. [REVIEW]David H. Turner - 1995 - Sophia 34 (1):173-187.
  14.  41
    Theoretical and Practical Issues in the Definition of Health: Insights from Aboriginal Australia.P. Boddington & U. Raisanen - 2009 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 34 (1):49-67.
    This paper discusses attempts to define health within a public policy arena and practical and conceptual difficulties that arise. An Australian Aboriginal definition of health is examined. Although there are certain difficulties of translation, this definition is prominent in current Australian health policy and discourse about health. The definition can be seen as broadly holistic in comparison to other holistic definitions such as that of the World Health Organization. The nature of this holism and its grounding within (...)
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  15.  7
    Emplaced Myth: Space, Narrative, and Knowledge in Aboriginal Australia and Papua New Guinea.Alan Rumsey & James F. Weiner - 2001 - University of Hawaii Press.
    Australia and Papua New Guinea share a number of important social, cultural, and historical features, making a sustained comparison between the two especially productive. This situates the ethnography of the two areas within a comparative framework and examines the relationship between indigenous systems of knowledge and place - an issue of growing concern to anthropologists. The essays demonstrate the manner in which regimes of restricted knowledge serve to protect and augment cultural property and the proprietorship over sites and territory; how (...)
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  16. Right story, wrong story: how to have fearless conversations in hell.Tyson Yunkaporta - 2025 - New York: HarperOne.
    Continuing the work of the award-winning Sand Talk, Tyson Yunkaporta casts an Indigenous lens on contemporary society, challenging us to face conflict and embrace conversation to find our way onto the right track"-- Provided by publisher.
     
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  17.  8
    Knowledges “In the Land”? A Process Phenomenological Reading of Deborah Bird Rose’s “Exploring an Aboriginal Land Ethic”.Andrew Kirkpatrick - 2024 - Research in Phenomenology 54 (3):368-388.
    Inspired by a (process) phenomenological reading of Deborah Bird Rose’s 1988 article “Exploring an Aboriginal Land Ethic,” and drawing on Merleau-Ponty’s claim that knowledge is “in the hands,” this paper explores the intersection of Merleau-Ponty’s embodied, process phenomenology and Indigenous Australian place-based ontologies. Rather than the moral demands or consequences of adopting an “Aboriginal land ethic,” the present paper is concerned with the ontological and epistemological – or, broadly speaking, the phenomenological – underpinnings of such a land (...)
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  18.  12
    (1 other version)Sand Talk: Process Philosophy and Indigenous Knowledges.Julien Tempone-Wiltshire - forthcoming - Process Studies 53 (1):42-68.
    Through a close study of T. Yunkaporta's 2019’s Sand Talk, this article explores fractal thinking and the pattern of creation in Indigenous cosmology; the role of custodianship in respectful interaction between living systems; alternative Indigenous understandings of nonlinearity, time, and transience; the process-panpsychism and animism present in Indigenous perceptions of cosmos as living Country, illustrated in the Dreaming and Turnaround creation event; the role of embodied cognition and haptic and situated knowledge in Indigenous science; Indigenous holistic reasoning and the mind-body (...)
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  19.  46
    Elizabeth Mackinlay.Disturbances and Dislocations: Understanding Teaching and Learning Experiences in Indigenous Australian Women's Music and Dance(Bern: Peter Lang, 2007).Sarah H. Watts - 2009 - Philosophy of Music Education Review 17 (1):90-94.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Disturbances and Dislocations: Understanding Teaching and Learning Experiences in Indigenous Australian Women’s Music and DanceSarah H. WattsElizabeth Mackinlay. Disturbances and Dislocations: Understanding Teaching and Learning Experiences in Indigenous Australian Women’s Music and Dance (Bern: Peter Lang, 2007).Elizabeth Mackinlay, a lecturer in the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies Unit at the University of Queensland, documents her unique pedagogical approaches and ways of thinking about the (...)
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  20.  15
    Indigenising Anthropology with Guattari and Deleuze.Barbara Glowczewski - 2019 - [Edinburgh, Scotland]: Edinburgh University Press.
    This collection of essays charts the intellectual trajectory of Barbara Glowczewski, an anthropologist who has worked with the Warlpiri people of Australia since 1979. She shows that the ways Aboriginal people actualise virtualities of their Dreaming space-time into collective networks of ritualised places resonate with Guattarian and Deleuzian concepts. Inspired by the art and struggles of different Indigenous people and other discriminated groups, especially women, Glowczewski draws on her own conversations with Guattari, and her debates with various scholars to (...)
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  21.  7
    Dilemmas: beyond binaries and double binds.Michael Jackson - 2025 - Philadelphia: University of Philadelphia Press.
    This book explores some of the most pressing existential problems of our times, from climate change and social injustice, to the challenges of balancing personal needs against the needs of others. Pushing back against the tendency to think of dilemmas as clear-cut binary choices, anthropologist Michael Jackson shows us the ingenious ways dilemmas are addressed in non-Western traditions, as well as how they are reimagined and circumvented in a variety of contemporary settings. Each chapter examines a particular dilemma--from the apparent (...)
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  22.  11
    Becoming a Knower Through Apory.Helen Ruth Verran & Yasunori Hayashi - 2024 - Journal of World Philosophies 8 (2).
    Located in a settler-Australian tertiary education institution we develop a worldly or mundane approach to working in and between institutions enacting two distinct world philosophies. We engage with the epistemics embedded and expressed in the functioning of modern institutions committed to a naturalistic scientific world. And albeit to a more limited extent we engage with epistemics embedded in and expressed by institutions framed and ordered by collectively enacting intentions of Eternal World-Making Beings of Yolngu Aboriginal Australian lands (...)
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  23.  4
    Numinous fields: perceiving the sacred in nature, landscape, and art.Samer Akkach, John Powell & Jeff Malpas (eds.) - 2024 - Boston: Brill.
    Numinous Fields has its roots in a phenomenological understanding of perception. It seeks to understand what, beyond the mere sensory data they provide, landscape, nature, and art, both separately and jointly, may mean when we experience them. It focuses on actual or potential experiences of the numinous, or sacred, that such encounters may give rise to. This volume is multi-disciplinary in scope. It examines perceptions of place, space, nature, and art as well as perceptions of place, space, and nature in (...)
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  24. Aboriginal Australians: a History since 1788: Fourth Edition [Book Review].Tracey Schmidt - 2010 - Agora (History Teachers' Association of Victoria) 45 (2):70.
     
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  25.  15
    Thinking about law: perspectives on the history, philosophy, and sociology of law.Rosemary Hunter, Richard Ingleby & Richard Johnstone (eds.) - 1995 - St. Leonards, NSW, Australia: Allen & Unwin.
    There is more to law than rules, robes and precedents. Rather, law is an integral part of social practices and policies, as diverse and complex as society itself. Thinking About Law offers a comprehensive introduction to the ways in which law has been presented and represented. It explores historical, sociological, economic and philosophical perspectives on the major legal and political debates in Australia today. The contributors examine the position of Aborigines in the Australian legal system and the impact of (...)
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  26.  9
    Delayed response: the art of waiting from the ancient to the instant world.Jason Farman - 2018 - New Haven: Yale University Press.
    We have always been conscious of the wait for life-changing messages, whether it be the time it takes to receive a text message from your love, for a soldier's family to learn news from the front, or for a space probe to deliver data from the far reaches of the solar system. In this book in praise of wait times, award-winning author Jason Farman passionately argues that the delay between call and answer has always been an important part of the (...)
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  27.  16
    Doing Difference Together.Peter Atterton - 2011 - Culture and Dialogue 1 (2):21-36.
    Our essay begins with a story of a disagreement between a senior Aboriginal elder and an eminent Australian environmental scientist about whether two plants are the same or different. This highly specific disagreement, which occurred in the context of an attempt to exchange knowledge about land management, brings into focus what is involved in developing a philosophically sophisticated postcolonial dialogue as part of knowledge and culture work with Yolŋu Aboriginal Australians. We propose an Australian comparative empirical (...)
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  28. Reviews : Richard Broome, Aboriginal Australians: Black Response to White Dominance, 1788-1980, George Allen & Unwin (Sydney, 1982) Paul Wilson, Black Death, White Hands, George Allen & Unwin (Sydney, 1982). [REVIEW]Bette Moore - 1984 - Thesis Eleven 8 (1):157-159.
    Reviews : Richard Broome, Aboriginal Australians: Black Response to White Dominance, 1788-1980, George Allen & Unwin Paul Wilson, Black Death, White Hands, George Allen & Unwin.
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  29.  95
    History and collective responsibility.Robert Sparrow - 2000 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 78 (3):346 – 359.
    In this paper I will argue that contemporary non-Aboriginal Australians can collectively be held responsible for past injustices committed against the Aboriginal peoples of this land. An examination of the role played by history in determining the nature of the present reveals both the temporal extension of the Australian community that confronts the question of responsibility for historical injustice and the ways in which we continue to participate in those same injustices. Because existing injustices suffered by indigenous (...)
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  30.  17
    Owning solutions: a collaborative model to improve quality in hospital care for Aboriginal Australians.Angela Durey, Dianne Wynaden, Sandra C. Thompson, Patricia M. Davidson, Dawn Bessarab & Judith M. Katzenellenbogen - 2012 - Nursing Inquiry 19 (2):144-152.
    DUREY A, WYNADEN D, THOMPSON SC, DAVIDSON PM, BESSARAB D and KATZENELLENBOGEN JM. Nursing Inquiry 2012; 19: 144–152 [Epub ahead of print]Owning solutions: a collaborative model to improve quality in hospital care for Aboriginal AustraliansWell‐documented health disparities between Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (hereafter referred to as Aboriginal) and non‐Aboriginal Australians are underpinned by complex historical and social factors. The effects of colonisation including racism continue to impact negatively on Aboriginal health outcomes, despite being under‐recognised (...)
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  31. and Will Sanders, eds., Citizenship and Indigenous Australians: Changing Conceptions and Possibilities, Melbourne, Cambridge University Press, 1998.Australian Citizenship - 2000 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 78 (3):418428.
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  32.  8
    Encountering Aborigines: A Case Study: Anthropology and the Australian Aboriginal.Kenelm Burridge - 1973 - Pergamon Press.
    Encountering Aborigines: A Case Study: Anthropology and the Australian Aboriginal details the concerns in contemporary anthropological research of aboriginal Australians.
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  33.  12
    Oodgeroo of the Noonuccal (Kath Walker) of Australia 1920–1993.Therese Boos Dykeman - 2023 - In Mary Ellen Waithe & Therese Boos Dykeman (eds.), Women Philosophers from Non-western Traditions: The First Four Thousand Years. Springer Verlag. pp. 433-443.
    Australian Aborigine Oodgeroo Noonuccal/Kath Walker (1920–1993), having had only a primary school education, came to be awarded four honorary doctorates. An acknowledged poet, she was the first Australian Aborigine woman to have become a published author. Aiming to improve the status of the Aborigine, she became a political leader, and in her writings, made important distinctions between racial integration and assimilation and between just laws and equal rights. She retells Aborigine legends for the purpose of bringing understanding to (...)
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  34.  37
    Australian Aboriginal Property Rights as Issues of Indigenous Sovereignty and Citizenship.Barbara Ann Hocking & Barbara Joyce Hocking - 1999 - Ratio Juris 12 (2):196-225.
    Aboriginal Australians have traditionally enjoyed little protection from the law. The matter of land has been at the heart of white settler/Aboriginal relations since the nation was first founded. It is only recently that recognition has been given to the land rights of Australian indigenous people. This recognition was finally made at the property law level in 1992 through the High Court decision in Mabo v. Queensland (n. 2) ([1992] 175 CLR 1). The 1993 High Court decision (...)
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  35.  3
    The Philosophy of Australian Education.Donald Hamilton Rankin - 1941 - Victoria, the Arrow Printery Pty..
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  36. The Twentieth Anniversary of Pope John Paul II's Address to Aboriginal Australians.Christopher Prowse - 2006 - The Australasian Catholic Record 83 (3):264.
     
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  37.  15
    Issues of knowledge in the policy of self-determination for aboriginal Australian communities.Helen Watson-Verran’S. & Leon White’S. - 1993 - Knowledge, Technology & Policy 6 (1):67-78.
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  38.  19
    Political philosophy and Australian far-right media: A critical discourse analysis of The Unshackled and XYZ.Imogen Richards, Maria Rae, Matteo Vergani & Callum Jones - 2021 - Thesis Eleven 163 (1):103-130.
    A 21st-century growth in prevalence of extreme right-wing nationalism and social conservatism in Australia, Europe, and America, in certain respects belies the positive impacts of online, new, and alternative forms of global media. Cross-national forms of ‘far-right activism’ are unconfined to their host nations; individuals and organisations campaign on the basis of ethno-cultural separatism, while capitalising on internet-based affordances for communication and ideological cross-fertilisation. Right-wing revolutionary ideas disseminated in this media, to this end, embody politico-cultural aims that can only be (...)
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  39.  2
    Education in the inquiring society.Margaret Mackie & Australian Council for Educational Research - 1966 - [Hawthorn, Melbourne]: Australian Council for Educational Research.
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  40.  1
    The development and philosophy of Australian aestheticism.Donald Hamilton Rankin - 1949 - Melbourne,: Melbourne.
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  41.  23
    Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Collections of Genetic Heritage: The Legal, Ethical and Practical Considerations of a Dynamic Consent Approach to Decision Making.Megan Prictor, Sharon Huebner, Harriet J. A. Teare, Luke Burchill & Jane Kaye - 2020 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 48 (1):205-217.
    Dynamic Consent is both a model and a specific web-based tool that enables clear, granular communication and recording of participant consent choices over time. The DC model enables individuals to know and to decide how personal research information is being used and provides a way in which to exercise legal rights provided in privacy and data protection law. The DC tool is flexible and responsive, enabling legal and ethical requirements in research data sharing to be met and for online health (...)
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  42.  41
    Settler-colonialism’s “miscarriage”.Joanne Faulkner - 2019 - Angelaki 24 (3):137-154.
    The relation between Australia’s First Nations peoples and settler-colonial Australians may be characterised as having “miscarried” to the extent that colonial difference is unacknowledged,...
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  43.  31
    Sacred Exchanges: Images in Global Context.Robyn Ferrell - 2012 - Columbia University Press.
    As the international art market globalizes the indigenous image, it changes its identity, status, value, and purpose in local and larger contexts. Focusing on a school of Australian Aboriginal painting that has become popular in the contemporary art world, Robyn Ferrell traces the influence of cultural exchanges on art, the self, and attitudes toward the other. Aboriginal acrylic painting, produced by indigenous women artists of the Australian Desert, bears a superficial resemblance to abstract expressionism and is (...)
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  44.  20
    Globalising Aboriginal Reconciliation: Indigenous Australians and Asian Migrants.Minoru Hokari - 2003 - Cultural Studies Review 9 (2):84-101.
    Over the last few years, I have attended several political meetings concerned with the refugee crisis, multiculturalism or Indigenous rights in Australia, meetings at which liberal democratic–minded ‘left-wing’ people came together to discuss, or agitate for change in, governmental policies. At these meetings, I always found it difficult to accept the slogans on their placards and in their speeches: ‘Shame Australia! Reconciliation for a united Australia’, ‘Wake up Australia! We welcome refugees!’ or ‘True Australians are tolerant! Let’s celebrate multicultural Australia!’ (...)
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  45.  8
    How Australian Aboriginal Tiddas (Sisters) Theologians Deal with the Threat of Genocide.Lee Miena Skye - 2015 - Feminist Theology 23 (2):128-142.
    This paper will reveal our women as active theologians, dealing with the silent threat of approaching genocide, the end of so called ‘full-bloods’ of our race. Finding ways of healing, and being activists, living in the conscious and subconscious oppression. I am so proud that in the light of this, they emerge as responsible people, living constructive and influential lives. Yet the suffering takes its toll and they die young or are sick and disabled young. I donated my Harvard Post-doctoral (...)
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  46.  61
    Passing strange and wonderful: aesthetics, nature, and culture.Yi-fu Tuan - 1993 - New York: Kodansha International.
    Conventional wisdom suggests that aesthetic experiences - those moments when the senses come to life - are important only after more basic needs have been met. In this inspiring wealth of provocative ideas, Yi-Fu Tuan demonstrates that feeling and beauty are essential parts of life and society. The aesthetic is shown to be not merely one aspect of culture but its central core - both its driving force and its ultimate goal. Beginning with the individual and the physical world, the (...)
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  47.  22
    Australian aboriginal religion in a comparative context.Max Charlesworth - 1987 - Sophia 26 (1):50-57.
  48. The Australian Christian churches and the aboriginal reconciliation process : public religion and its limitations.Michael Phillips - 2018 - In Kalliopē Chainoglou, Barry Collins, Michael Phillips & John Strawson (eds.), Injustice, memory and faith in human rights. New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
     
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  49. The australian aborigines: to-day and tomorrow.A. P. Elkin - 1959 - Scientia 53 (94):261.
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  50.  87
    Figured Worlds: Ontological Obstacles in Intercultural Relations.J. R. Clammer, Sylvie Poirier & Eric Schwimmer (eds.) - 2004 - University of Toronto Press.
    This collection begins its rich analytical investigation by describing how people Australian Aborigines, New Zealand Maori, Japanese, and Africans first learn the figured worlds of their own culture, made up of sensations, affirmations and ...
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