Indigenous Nations and Collaborative Futures
Indigenous Nations and Collaborative Futures showcases new thinking about Indigenous nation building and decolonisation in the regional contexts of Australia, Aotearoa-New Zealand and other countries of the Southern Pacific Rim. Attending critically to legacies of settler-colonialism in this region, the series supplements and enriches scholarship emerging from Indigenous perspectives and experiences in the United States, Canada and other Occupied Territories. The Indigenous-led and Indigenous-centred research appearing in this series explores the diverse ways in which Indigenous authorities are designing and utilising modern political institutions that match their cultural values and assert a continuing right and responsibility to care for traditional lands and waters. Conceived through the optic of the political, ‘Indigenous Nations and Collaborative Futures’ publishes innovative and important research that studies the transformative potential of cross-cultural interaction, collaboration and agreement-making to successfully mediate culturally diverse political interests and values in settler-colonial jurisdictions. The series contributes new thinking about the reparation of historical injustice and the terms and future conditions of positive coexistence after colonisation.



Editor(s): Larissa Behrendt, Simone Bignall, Daryle Rigney and Linda Tuhiwai Smith
Staff editorial contact: Dhara Snowden (dsnowden@rowman.com)