Mobile HomeFull Site
Archies Thongs... Current Systems... Aviation... Accounting... Administration... Auditing... Economics... Ethics... Finance... Governance... Human Resources... Business, Civil (Business, Civil & Common Law) Common Law (Business, Civil & Common Law) Business, Civil (Business, Civil & Common Law) Common Law (Business, Civil & Common Law) Management... Marketing... Occupational Health (Occupational Health & Safety) Safety (Occupational Health & Safety) Taxation... Taxation... Tourism... Accounting... Databases (Databases & Data Management) Data Management (Databases & Data Management) Software Development... Hardware... Information (Information & Project Management) Project Management (Information & Project Management) Networks (Networks & Security) Security (Networks & Security) Statistics... Systems Analysis... Web Development... Classics (Classics & Literature) Literature (Classics & Literature) Network Cables... Keyboards (Keyboards & Mice) Mice (Keyboards & Mice) Audio Gear... Power (Power & Cables) Cables (Power & Cables) Telephony (Telephony & Conferencing) Conferencing (Telephony & Conferencing) USB Accessories (USB Accessories & Cables) Cables (USB Accessories & Cables) Contact Us... CQUni Logo Run-out Clothing... Dummies - Learning Made Easy... Early Childhood... English Language Tuition... General Education... High School... Construction... Electrical (Electrical & Electronic) Electronic (Electrical & Electronic) Mechanical... Mining... Project Management... Fathers Day... Featured Books... Featured Gifts... Featured Australia Post... Flash Drives... Visual Arts (Visual Arts & Photography) Photography (Visual Arts & Photography) Help... Order Tracking... Our Stores ( About )... Rockhampton... Survey... Constitutional Law... Criminal Law... CQUni Logo Accessories... CQUni Clothing ( General )... CQUni Clothing ( Office Style )... CQUni Clothing ( Coursewear )... CQUni Clothing ( Coursewear )... CQUni Clothing ( Staff Dept )... CQUni Corporate Gifts... Math (Math & Stats) Stats (Math & Stats) Mothers Day... Departmental Merchandise... Ergonomics... Graduation... Heritage Logo... Paramedic... Merchandise Pre-Order... Safety Gear... Anatomy... Examination (Examination & Assessment) Assessment (Examination & Assessment) Dictionaries... Mental Health... Midwifery... Nutrition... Pharmacology... Training... Non-Fiction... Accessories... Bags... Eyewear... Hygiene... Instruments... Kits... Lights... Quick Reference... Scissors... Socks... Sphygmomanometers... Stethoscopes... Tags... Thermometers... Watches... Clinical Nursing... Real Estate... Research... Laboratory Equipment... Rural (Rural & Regional) Regional (Rural & Regional) Sale ( Cabling )... Sale ( Consumables )... Sale ( Featured )... Sale ( Hardware )... Sale ( Software )... Sale ( Storage )... CQUni Logo Stationery... Biology... Botany... Chiropractic... Chemistry... Dentistry... Environment... Medical Imaging... Occupational Health (Occupational Health & Therapy) Therapy (Occupational Health & Therapy) Paramedic... Physics... Podiatry... Pathology... Sonography... Sport (Sport & Physiology) Physiology (Sport & Physiology) Sport (Sport & Physiology) Physiology (Sport & Physiology)
Our Stores Textbooks Help
Order now for Term One - Textbooks,Ebooks and Coursewear.
Visit our FULL SITE to order Print or eTextbooks

Indigenous People , Crime and Punishment Rate/Review



by Anthony , Thalia
Routledge Chapman & Hall
$81.99
Visit our FULL SITE to order Print or eTextbooks
Indigenous People, Crime and Punishment examines criminal sentencing courts’ changing characterisations of Indigenous peoples’ identity, culture and postcolonial status. Focusing largely on Australian Indigenous peoples, but referring also to the Canadian and New Zealand experiences, Thalia Anthony critically analyzes how the judiciary have interpreted Indigenous difference. Through an analysis of Indigenous sentencing decisions and remarks over a fifty year period in a number of jurisdictions, the book demonstrates how discretion is moulded to cultural assumptions about Indigeneity. More specifically, Indigenous People, Crime and Punishment shows how the increasing demonisation of Indigenous criminality and culture in sentencing has turned earlier ‘gains’ in the legal recognition of Indigenous peoples on their head. The recognition of Indigenous difference is thereby revealed as a pliable concept that is just as likely to remove rights as it is to grant them.
Mackay00
Rockhampton00