Politics and the cultural landscape: the case of aboriginal land rights. JACOBS, J. Australian Geographical Studies, 26(2):249–263, 1988.
Politics and the cultural landscape: the case of aboriginal land rights [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
In this paper Aboriginal land rights are analysed from the perspective of a disadvantaged group seeking access to a scarce resource controlled by external agents. The Aboriginal participants in land rights politics are found to be actively seeking ways in which their interest in the land can most effectively be communicated to external groups which have constructed well‐formed, but often distorted images of what constitutes a genuine Aboriginal interest in the land These externally constructed notions of Aboriginality and what constitutes a valid land claim are influencing the concepts used by Aboriginal groups in the public political arena to demonstrate their unique interest in the land In this paper three examples of this process are explored‐ the emphasis of a specific gender model, the emphasis on spatially discrete sacred sites and the emphasis on the bounded tribal territory.
@article{jacobs_politics_1988,
	series = {Oceania / {Pacific}},
	title = {Politics and the cultural landscape: the case of aboriginal land rights},
	volume = {26},
	issn = {0004-9190, 1467-8470},
	shorttitle = {Politics and the {Cultural} {Landscape}},
	url = {https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1467-8470.1988.tb00577.x},
	doi = {10.1111/j.1467-8470.1988.tb00577.x},
	abstract = {In this paper Aboriginal land rights are analysed from the perspective of a disadvantaged group seeking access to a scarce resource controlled by external agents. The Aboriginal participants in land rights politics are found to be actively seeking ways in which their interest in the land can most effectively be communicated to external groups which have constructed well‐formed, but often distorted images of what constitutes a genuine Aboriginal interest in the land These externally constructed notions of Aboriginality and what constitutes a valid land claim are influencing the concepts used by Aboriginal groups in the public political arena to demonstrate their unique interest in the land In this paper three examples of this process are explored‐ the emphasis of a specific gender model, the emphasis on spatially discrete sacred sites and the emphasis on the bounded tribal territory.},
	language = {en},
	number = {2},
	urldate = {2023-11-09},
	journal = {Australian Geographical Studies},
	author = {JACOBS, Jane},
	year = {1988},
	keywords = {Region: Oceania / Pacific, Language: English},
	pages = {249--263},
	file = {Jacobs - 1988 - Politics and the Cultural Landscape The Case of A.pdf:/Users/bastien/Zotero/storage/DCJY2VGH/Jacobs - 1988 - Politics and the Cultural Landscape The Case of A.pdf:application/pdf},
}

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