Indigenous Relationality: Women, Kinship and the Law

Strong female governance has always been central to one of the world’s oldest existing culturally diverse, harmonious, sustainable, and democratic societies. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women’s governance of a country twice the size of Europe is based on complex laws wh...

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Main Authors: Patricia Dudgeon, Abigail Bray
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-04-01
Series:Genealogy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2313-5778/3/2/23
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spelling doaj-ac8554fa8a5e4565888ba8563eb775572020-11-25T00:52:42ZengMDPI AGGenealogy2313-57782019-04-01322310.3390/genealogy3020023genealogy3020023Indigenous Relationality: Women, Kinship and the LawPatricia Dudgeon0Abigail Bray1School of Indigenous Studies, The University of Western Australia, Crawley WA 6009, AustraliaIndependent Researcher, London N7 8AN, UKStrong female governance has always been central to one of the world’s oldest existing culturally diverse, harmonious, sustainable, and democratic societies. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women’s governance of a country twice the size of Europe is based on complex laws which regulate relationships to country, family, community, culture and spirituality. These laws are passed down through generations and describe kinship systems which encompass sophisticated relations to the more-than-human. This article explores Indigenous kinship as an expression of relationality, culturally specific and complex Indigenous knowledge systems which are founded on a connection to the land. Although Indigenous Australian women’s kinships have been disrupted through dispossession from the lands they belong to, the forced removal of their children across generations, and the destruction of their culture, community and kinship networks, the survival of Indigenous women’s knowledge systems have supported the restoration of Indigenous relationality. The strengthening of Indigenous women’s kinship is explored as a source of social and emotional wellbeing and an emerging politics of environmental reproductive justice.https://www.mdpi.com/2313-5778/3/2/23Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander kinshipkincentric ecologyrelationalityIndigenous governancesocial and emotional wellbeingself-determinationIndigenous knowledge systems
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Patricia Dudgeon
Abigail Bray
spellingShingle Patricia Dudgeon
Abigail Bray
Indigenous Relationality: Women, Kinship and the Law
Genealogy
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander kinship
kincentric ecology
relationality
Indigenous governance
social and emotional wellbeing
self-determination
Indigenous knowledge systems
author_facet Patricia Dudgeon
Abigail Bray
author_sort Patricia Dudgeon
title Indigenous Relationality: Women, Kinship and the Law
title_short Indigenous Relationality: Women, Kinship and the Law
title_full Indigenous Relationality: Women, Kinship and the Law
title_fullStr Indigenous Relationality: Women, Kinship and the Law
title_full_unstemmed Indigenous Relationality: Women, Kinship and the Law
title_sort indigenous relationality: women, kinship and the law
publisher MDPI AG
series Genealogy
issn 2313-5778
publishDate 2019-04-01
description Strong female governance has always been central to one of the world’s oldest existing culturally diverse, harmonious, sustainable, and democratic societies. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women’s governance of a country twice the size of Europe is based on complex laws which regulate relationships to country, family, community, culture and spirituality. These laws are passed down through generations and describe kinship systems which encompass sophisticated relations to the more-than-human. This article explores Indigenous kinship as an expression of relationality, culturally specific and complex Indigenous knowledge systems which are founded on a connection to the land. Although Indigenous Australian women’s kinships have been disrupted through dispossession from the lands they belong to, the forced removal of their children across generations, and the destruction of their culture, community and kinship networks, the survival of Indigenous women’s knowledge systems have supported the restoration of Indigenous relationality. The strengthening of Indigenous women’s kinship is explored as a source of social and emotional wellbeing and an emerging politics of environmental reproductive justice.
topic Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander kinship
kincentric ecology
relationality
Indigenous governance
social and emotional wellbeing
self-determination
Indigenous knowledge systems
url https://www.mdpi.com/2313-5778/3/2/23
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