Book Chapter
‘Troublesome Friends and Dangerous Enemies’
H Douglas, M Finnane
Palgrave Socio Legal Studies | Palgrave Socio-Legal Studies | Macmillan Education UK | Published : 2012
Abstract
Before British law prevailed there was a protracted struggle over what it might possibly mean to assert jurisdiction over the Indigenous peoples of Australia. If jurisdiction was ‘clearly an inseparable incident of sovereignty’, as magistrate W H Mackie put it in a Perth court in 1842, what were the implications for the ‘savage tribes’ who occupied the country? The assertion of law’s authority depended on two instruments: one linguistic, the other physical. In the colonial encounter, these instruments were exercised on both sides. Aboriginal peoples used force tactically, and negotiated terms of engagement with invading settlers where they could. On their side, settlers pondered the applicat..
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