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10 - Citizenship and Legitimacy in Post-colonial Australia

from Part III - Emerging Possibilities

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 September 2009

Nicolas Peterson
Affiliation:
Australian National University, Canberra
Will Sanders
Affiliation:
Australian National University, Canberra
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Summary

Effective citizenship, even among people of diverse interests and values, requires a shared sense of political community, including allegiance to common legal and political institutions and general acceptance of each other's legitimate membership of the community and right to citizenship. In most democratic countries, issues of legitimacy are relatively insignificant, provided the borders are well established and the basic constitutional rules uncontested. In some democracies, however, particularly former settler societies such as Australia, New Zealand, the United States and Canada, the legitimacy of the regime and therefore the legitimacy of its citizens have been called into question. The assumptions that underlay colonial settlement, including the supposed civilising mission and ethnic superiority of Europeans, have been discredited. With this discrediting has come the realisation that the regimes of the settlers were imposed on the indigenous peoples by force and with callous disregard for their cultures and rights. For the indigenous minorities themselves, there is little reason to owe allegiance to a legal and political system to which they have never consented and by which they continue to be dispossessed. While the legitimacy of their residence in the country is beyond doubt, they must question the legitimacy of the imposed regime and the citizenship it confers. Like other colonised peoples, they are seeking restoration of the rights lost through colonisation, particularly the right to their lands and the right to political self-determination.

For the settler and migrant majorities, at the same time, the shift in values can be disturbing.

Type
Chapter
Information
Citizenship and Indigenous Australians
Changing Conceptions and Possibilities
, pp. 179 - 195
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1998

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