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Criminal Justice as a Colonial Project in Settler-Colonialism

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posted on 2024-11-14, 06:18 authored by Juan Tauri, Ngati Porou
This paper offers an Indigenous-centred, critical perspective on the Colonial Projects (Thomas, 1994) employed in settler-colonial contexts to negate, or at the very least nullify, the negative impact of two inter-related 'wicked problems' that are deemed peculiar to these jurisdictions: the high levels of Indigenous over-representation in the criminal justice system, and the impact of Indigenous resistance to the hegemony of the imposed, criminal justice systems deployed by settler-colonial states. The paper is comprised of three inter-related parts; the first two outline the construction and deployment of Colonial Projects in the colonial and neo-colonial contexts, wherein it is argued that the matrix of criminal justice was foundational to the state's attempted eradication of, and eventual socio-economic marginalisation of Indigenous peoples. The final part offers an argument that the continued success of criminal justice as a (neo)colonial project, stems from its parasitic relationship with the discipline of criminology. Together, these supportive colonial projects deployment against Indigenous peoples demonstrates that structural violence continues to be a significant component of social control in the neo-liberal, neo-colonial context.

History

Citation

Tauri, J. Marcellus. & Porou, N. (2014). Criminal Justice as a Colonial Project in Settler-Colonialism. African Journal of Criminology and Justice Studies, 8 (1), 20-37.

Journal title

African Journal of Criminology and Justice Studies

Volume

8

Issue

1

Pagination

20-37

Language

English

RIS ID

116474

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