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On Recognition and Renewal: Quarterly Essay 90
On Recognition and Renewal: Quarterly Essay 90 | Megan Davis
5 posts | 1 read
This essential Quarterly Essay seeks to do two things- to make the strongest, clearest possible case for the Voice to Parliament. And to draw out the significance and the promise of this reform - what it could mean for recognition and justice. Megan Davis presents the Voice as an Australian solution to an Australian problem. For the First Nations, it is a practical response to "the torment of our powerlessness." Davis argues that it will increase accountability across a range of areas, from Juukan Gorge to youth detention to child protection. She shows that we have arrived at a "constitutional moment" that brings with it a new vision of Country and community.
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mspixieears

Often those without power suffer from what Fricker calls a ‘credibility deficit‘.

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mspixieears

The philosopher Miranda Fricker has written on this economy of credibility, which she calls ‘epistemic justice‘. Epistemic justice raises questions about who knows what and who speaks for whom and it is an issue to grapple with for the referendum. (28-9)

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mspixieears

You cannot lead if you do not read. Yet the National Party rejected the Voice in 2022 and committed to a ‘No‘ vote before even knowing the substance. (27)

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mspixieears

On constitutional recognition, at each meeting, for each prime minister, each new Indigenous Affairs minister, we had to explain the process from scratch. Tom Calma, a former Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner, used to say to us as younger Aboriginal leaders, “leaders are readers.” (p27)

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mspixieears

…the American sociologist Robert Merton, who identified five different ways people adapt to a prevailing order: conformity, innovation, ritualistic, retreatism and rebellion. Ritualistic means ‘the acceptance of institutionalised means for securing regulatory goals while losing all focus on achieving the goals or outcomes themselves‘. (p12)