id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_qe2et7jjifbchklfolmrp5eg3e Amanda Kearney Interculturalism and Responsive Reflexivity in a Settler Colonial Context 2019 18 .pdf application/pdf 12263 886 46 land rights as a form of coloniality that maintains the centrality of state power, and in the second, land activism, as expressed in the campaigns of Seed, Australia's first Indigenous youth-led climate Keywords: interculturalism; coloniality; deep colonising; empathy; Indigenous Australia; reflexivity This article explores interculturalism in the context of a settler colonial nation. Examining how interculturalism might support land related matters, such as ecological health formally shaping Australian social and political life, policy reform, and activism around Indigenous configured frontiers of colonialism which continue to take Indigenous people's lands and waters in identities (settler colonial/national), rights, laws, and institutional expressions of modernity such new relations, emerging from the interactions between the settler colonial state and Indigenous nations, Legislative land rights are the product of settler colonial ontology, epistemology and axiology. The epistemic spaces, which distinguish Aboriginal ways of configuring rights to lands and waters, Reconciliation and Colonial Power: Indigenous Rights in Australia. ./cache/work_qe2et7jjifbchklfolmrp5eg3e.pdf ./txt/work_qe2et7jjifbchklfolmrp5eg3e.txt