The inheritance and repetition of colonial practices of dispossession

Author:

Chatterjee Pratichi1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Leeds, UK

Abstract

State processes of land dispossession rely on multiple modes of power such as domination, legitimisation, pacification, and deceit to achieve their aims. This article analyses how governments in Australia have drawn on these varied forms to redevelop inner city areas in Sydney which are important to Indigenous communities. It analyses three redevelopment practices that targeted the suburbs of Redfern and Waterloo between 2005 and 2019. First, domineering planning structures used to marginalise Indigenous housing in Redfern. Second, racist tropes that have worked to legitimise this authoritarian approach and the resulting dispossession. Third, community consultations, that attempted to placate residents impacted by redevelopment, with culturally inclusive participation, but that maintained a deceitful silence on the question of colonisation. The article shows how authoritarian state planning, racialised legitimisation, and colonial pacification and deceit wielded in Redfern and Waterloo, are directly inherited from and/or reproduce historic colonial nation and city building agendas. On this basis, the article claims that settler colonialism can be understood as a self-perpetuating process, where practices of dispossession, developed at a given time, can set precedent for and be reworked into later programmes of land dispossession.

Funder

Endeavour Postgraduate Scholarship

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Environmental Science (miscellaneous),Geography, Planning and Development

Reference80 articles.

1. ABC News (2004) Carr urges calm after Redfern riot. ABC. 16 February. Available at: www.abc.net.au/news/2004-02-16/carr-urges-calm-after-redfern-riot/136390 (accessed 2 February 2022).

2. ABC News Radio (2004) Redfern Coalition to resist forcible acquisition of The Block”, ABC. 20 December. Available at: www.gooriweb.org/ (accessed 2 February 2022).

3. Action for Public Housing, n.d. Action for Public Housing Updates. Action for Public Housing. Available at: https://a4ph.substack.com/ (accessed 18 September 2023).

4. AIHW & NIAA (2021) Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Performance Framework. Tier 2 Determinants of Health 2.01 Housing. Available at: www.indigenoushpf.gov.au/measures/2-01-housing (accessed 20 June 2022).

5. AIHW (2019) Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people: A focus report on housing and homelessness. AIHW. Available at: www.aihw.gov.au/reports/ (accessed 20 June 2022).

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