Please enable JavaScript.
Coggle requires JavaScript to display documents.
Decolonising/Southern - Coggle Diagram
Decolonising/Southern
Essay Integration
-
Emphasize structural and historical causes behind Indigenous overrepresentation in criminal justice.
-
-
Link to broader struggles for Indigenous sovereignty, reparative justice, and transformative change.
Core Concepts
Challenges Eurocentric, colonial frameworks dominating criminology.
Emphasizes Indigenous knowledge systems, sovereignty, and community-centric justice.
-
-
Empirical Evidence
Indigenous Australians incarcerated at over 13 times general population rates; Indigenous women 24 times higher (ABS 2024).
Maranguka Justice Reinvestment Project (Bourke, NSW) reduced domestic violence by 23%, bail breaches by 14%, and improved school retention by 31% through community-led cultural programs.
Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody (2019) documented state violence and systemic failures leading to high Indigenous mortality in custody.
Studies reveal institutional racism embedded in policing, sentencing, and social policies disadvantaging Indigenous peoples.
Key Theories
Postcolonial Criminology: Analyzes how colonialism shapes modern legal and criminal justice systems.
Indigenous Criminology: Centers Indigenous perspectives, emphasizing relationality, healing, and resistance to colonial control.
Abolitionist Criminology: Critiques carceral state; advocates transformative, non-punitive justice.
Criticisms
Some scholars argue decolonisation in criminology faces challenges due to its deeply rooted Western origins.
Ongoing debates on how fully Indigenous epistemologies can be integrated or if alternative abolitionist models are needed.
-