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Impossible to detain without chains? The use of restraints on Aboriginal people in policing and prisons
© 2014 Taylor and Francis Group LLC. The use of restraints on Australian Aboriginal people had its inception in the early colonial period and continued well into the twentieth century. Despite condemnation in England, local opinion as to the desirability and efficacy of this practice was divided. This article explores the materiality of these restraints. It argues that chaining Aboriginal people was predicated not only on their presenting a bigger ‘flight risk’ than other prisoners, but that wider economic considerations provide an explanatory framework for understanding the delay between the denunciation of chaining practices and their eventual discontinuation. This article has been peer-reviewed.
History
Publication title
History AustraliaVolume
11Pagination
157-176ISSN
1449-0854Department/School
School of HumanitiesPublisher
Monash University ePressPlace of publication
AustraliaRights statement
2014 Copyright Monash UniversityRepository Status
- Restricted
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