The Human Right to Belong: Indigenous rights and sovereignty in Australia.

Activity: Engagement case studiesCommunity

Description

A contribution to public knowledge and debate based on my extensive published research into the politics of indigeneity.

This activity is complex because it involves the collection, explanation, interpretation, and presentation of diverse and contested theoretical ideas. It is complex because it translates theoretically difficult concepts into easily understandable terms for a non-specialist audience and applies them to questions of contemporary public policy. It is complex because it draws on ideas developed through my research published over several years. This means that time and effort cannot be quantified with precision but that it is, nevertheless, substantial. The diversity of end-users may be assumed from the publisher's international standing and location. The engagement plans and briefings occurred with the commissioning editor.
Period18 Feb 2020
Work forOxford University, United Kingdom
Degree of RecognitionInternational

Sustainable Development Goals

  • SDG 16: Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions

Countries where activity occurred

  • United Kingdom