Researching Migration on Indigenous Lands
Challenges, Reflections, Pathways
Series: IMISCOE Research Series;
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Product details:
- Publisher Springer Nature Switzerland
- Date of Publication 14 December 2025
- Number of Volumes 1 pieces, Book
- ISBN 9783031993275
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages225 pages
- Size 235x155 mm
- Language English
- Illustrations XII, 225 p. 4 illus. Illustrations, black & white 670
Categories
Long description:
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This open access edited collection provides an interdisciplinary assessment of research about migration on Indigenous lands. Via an assortment of critical reflections from settler colonial Australia, it identifies tensions between colonialism and Indigenous sovereignty as an increasingly salient topic of analysis within migration research. It poses challenges to migration research that takes place on Indigenous lands, reflects on the methodological and theoretical issues at play when studying migration in settler colonial Australia, and outlines potential pathways for ethical migration research agendas that genuinely engage with Indigenous knowledges and scholarship. The book also compares and synthesizes where studies of settler colonialism and migration have intersected and contributing authors profile how migration, colonialism and Indigenous sovereignties intersect in multicultural Australia’s pasts and presents. At its core, the volume challenges migration studies, from Australian shores, to reimagine itself. In doing so, questions related to migration are altered and the basis of discussion around colonial legacies, multiculturalism, integration and diversity is recast. By providing nuanced theoretical, historical, and reflective case studies from a rage of disciplinary approaches, the volume will be a great resource to students, academics in migration and refugee studies, Indigenous scholars, activists, as well as policymakers in settler colonial societies.
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Chapter 1. Foreword. Researching on Storied Lands: Reflexivity, Sovereignty, and the Ethics of Migration Research.- Chapter 2. Introduction. Recognising Indigenous Sovereignty in Migration Research: Australian Reflections.- Chapter 3. Standing at Intersections: Justifying a Migrant Culture Complicit in Eliminating my Aboriginal Heritage.- Chapter 4. A multicultural nomad and diasporic intellectual: in honour of Sneja Gunew.- Chapter 5. On Theory and Praxis in Migration Studies and Settler Colonial Critique.- Chapter 6. Language Rights on Unceded Lands: Cultural Struggles and Policy Negotiation in Australia.- Chapter 7. Indigenous Sovereignty and Multilingual Multiculturalism: Challenging the Monolingual Hegemony of Settler Colonialism.- Chapter 8. From Italy to So-Called Australia: On Doing Research Across Migrant and Indigenous Cinema.- Chapter 9. The Dark Side of Migration: Settler Colonial Belonging and the Myths of Italians’ Innocence.- Chapter 10. Naming ‘Little Greece’ on Gadigal Country: Rethinking Australian Multiculturalism via Indigenous Sovereignty.- Chapter 11. Untangling ‘Intangible Cultural Heritage’: Representations of Indigenous Politics in Greek Diaspora Press.- Chapter 12. The New Second Generation and Solidarity: Australian Art and Activism Advocating for Indigenous, Refugee and Migrant Allyship.
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