Why do governments choose to negotiate indigenous land claims
rather than resolve claims through some other means? In this book
Scholtz explores why a government would choose to implement a
negotiation policy, where it commits itself to a long-run strategy
of negotiation over a number of claims and over a significant
course of time.
Through an examination strongly grounded in archival research of
post-World War Two government decision-making in four established
democracies - Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and the United States
- Scholtz argues that negotiation policies emerge when indigenous
people mobilize politically prior to significant judicial
determinations on land rights, and not after judicial change alone.
Negotiating Claims links collective action and judicial change to
explain the emergence of new policy institutions.
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