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Apologies to the globally dispersed readers on the list. If you can't 
attend due to distance or otherwise, but know of similar events or 
actions (past or present) please let us know - we're looking to explore 
the diverse debates around indigenous sovereignty around the world, and 
in particular, the tensions inherent in the use of the passport as a 
symbol to disrupt colonial sovereignties.
Thanks, Katie


*Contesting Colonial Sovereignty: **
**A seminar to discuss the Aboriginal Passport Ceremony *
2pm, 22nd September 2012
Tin Sheds Gallery
148 City Rd, University of Sydney

On 15 September 2012 a Welcome to Aboriginal Land Passport Ceremony will 
be held in Redfern (http://aboriginalpassportceremony.org/). Over 200 
people, including newly arrived asylum seekers, will be issued with an 
Aboriginal Passport by Ray Jackson, President of the Indigenous Social 
Justice Association. The ceremony itself is an important and powerful 
disruption of settler colonialism and its assumptions of national 
sovereignty. It recognizes, furthermore, that indigenous sovereignty was 
never ceded. At the same time, the ceremony undermines the authority of 
state-issued passports as documents that finally determine questions of 
inclusion and exclusion. As the Ceremony organisers write, “the issuing 
of the Passports covers two important areas of interactions between the 
Traditional Owners of the Lands and migrants, asylum seekers and 
non-Aboriginal citizens of this country. Whilst they acknowledge our 
rights to all the Aboriginal Nations of Australia we reciprocate by 
welcoming them into our Nations. It is a moral win-win for all involved 
in the process”.

This Seminar, one week after the event, will consider a range of issues 
raised by the ceremony, including the politics of sovereignty; whether a 
singular indigenous sovereignty is possible; as well as what alternative 
sovereignties might look like. The seminar will be chaired by Eve 
Vincent and will involve the following speakers:

- Ray Jackson, President of the Indigenous Social Justice Association 
and long term activist who has been deeply involved in social movements 
for many years - from the Union movement through to deaths in custody 
and policing issues.

- Maria Giannacopolous, a lecturer in Socio-legal Studies and Criminal 
Justice at Flinders University. Her interdisciplinary research focuses 
on the relations between law, justice and sovereignty with a specific 
emphasis on racialised communities (Indigenous peoples, refugees and 
migrants) in Australia.

- Darren Parker, a Ngunnawal man, a graduate of University of Melbourne 
and currently a PhD student at the same university. On completion of 
this qualification he will be the first Aboriginal PhD graduate from 
Melbourne Law School. Darren has an interest in commercial law and in 
particular the social impact of law within our community and on the 
indigenous population in particular.

This seminar is the third in the cross-border collective’s monthly 
series of seminars on the theme of Politics, Colonialism, Borders. These 
seminars aim to bring together activists and academics to examine local 
and international movements and debates in order to develop a 
counter-politics of the border. In our view, any such political movement 
must confront and resist Australia’s colonial history and the ongoing 
dispossession of indigenous peoples. If you would like to get involved 
in future seminars, please email Katie Hepworth ([log in to unmask]) 
or Richard Bailey ([log in to unmask]).

The CBC is a Sydney based group that has been working on projects around 
race, the border, migration and the state for around two years. In the 
past, the Cross Border Collective has organised conferences, events, 
forums, protest and direct action. For more information see: 
crossbordersydney.org

The seminar is being held as part of the Crisis Complex exhibition at 
the Tin Sheds Gallery, with the support of Transforming Cultures, UTS 
(http://www.tfc.uts.edu.au/). Doors will open at 1:30 for a 2pm start.