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Keeping Hold of Justice: Encounters between Law and Colonialism
Jennifer Balint, Julie Evans, Mark McMillan, and Nesam McMillan
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Keeping Hold of Justice focuses on a select range of encounters between law and colonialism from the early nineteenth century to the present. It emphasizes the nature of colonialism as a distinctively structural injustice, one which becomes entrenched in the social, political, legal, and discursive structures of societies and thereby continues to affect people's lives in the present. It charts, in particular, the role of law in both enabling and sustaining colonial injustice and in recognizing and redressing it. In so doing, the book seeks to demonstrate the possibilities for structural justice that still exist despite the enduring legacies and harms of colonialism. It puts forward that these possibilities can be found through collaborative methodologies and practices, such as those informing this book, that actively bring together different disciplines, peoples, temporalities, laws and ways of knowing. They reveal law not only as a source of colonial harm but also as a potential means of keeping hold of justice.
Cover
Title Page
Copyright Page
Contents
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1. Introduction—Encounters between Law and Colonialism
Chapter 2. Settler Societies
Chapter 3. Holding Law
Chapter 4. Crimes against Humanity
Chapter 5. Transitional Justice and Settler Colonialism