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Planning for Coexistence? - Recognizing Indigenous rights through land-use planning in Canada and Australia (Hardcover, New Ed)
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Planning for Coexistence? - Recognizing Indigenous rights through land-use planning in Canada and Australia (Hardcover, New Ed)
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Planning is becoming one of the key battlegrounds for Indigenous
people to negotiate meaningful articulation of their sovereign
territorial and political rights, reigniting the essential tension
that lies at the heart of Indigenous-settler relations. But what
actually happens in the planning contact zone - when Indigenous
demands for recognition of coexisting political authority over
territory intersect with environmental and urban land-use planning
systems in settler-colonial states? This book answers that question
through a critical examination of planning contact zones in two
settler-colonial states: Victoria, Australia and British Columbia,
Canada. Comparing the experiences of four Indigenous communities
who are challenging and renegotiating land-use planning in these
places, the book breaks new ground in our understanding of
contemporary Indigenous land justice politics. It is the first
study to grapple with what it means for planning to engage with
Indigenous peoples in major cities, and the first of its kind to
compare the underlying conditions that produce very different
outcomes in urban and non-urban planning contexts. In doing so, the
book exposes the costs and limits of the liberal mode of
recognition as it comes to be articulated through planning,
challenging the received wisdom that participation and consultation
can solve conflicts of sovereignty. This book lays the theoretical,
methodological and practical groundwork for imagining what planning
for coexistence might look like: a relational, decolonizing
planning praxis where self-determining Indigenous peoples invite
settler-colonial states to their planning table on their terms.
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