Competing visions of ‘the people’ in Australia: First Nations and the state

In 2020 the Australian High Court decided the case of Love v. Commonwealth Thoms v. Commonwealth , a claim of constitutional belonging by two Aboriginal men. The Court was fractured in its reasoning and conclusion, a majority deciding that ‘Aboriginal Australians’ cannot be aliens. The case sits wit...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Comparative Constitutional Studies
Main Author: Arcioni, Elisa
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Edward Elgar Publishing 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.4337/ccs.2023.0007
https://www.elgaronline.com/view/journals/ccs/1/1/article-p75.xml
https://www.elgaronline.com/downloadpdf/journals/ccs/1/1/article-p75.xml
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Summary:In 2020 the Australian High Court decided the case of Love v. Commonwealth Thoms v. Commonwealth , a claim of constitutional belonging by two Aboriginal men. The Court was fractured in its reasoning and conclusion, a majority deciding that ‘Aboriginal Australians’ cannot be aliens. The case sits within a longer and ongoing story regarding the interaction between First Nations peoples and the Australian settler colonial state. The reasoning of the Love/Thoms case reveals two contrasting visions of the constitutional identity of ‘the people’ – one being a plural and diverse conception potentially capable of accommodating a distinct identity of First Nations peoples, the other being a unified conception dominated by formal equality and democratic participation. A study of the Love/Thoms case in its context also speaks to broader questions of constitutional identity. First, that constitutional identity is constructed through the interaction of multiple actors. It is through an ongoing dialogic between constitutional actors that constitutional identity evolves over time. Second, that there is a relationship between the identity of ‘the people’ and of their Constitution. A study of the construction of the constitutional identity of ‘the people’ in this case reveals principal characteristics of the Australian state’s constitutionalism: going to institutional and substantive questions regarding the respective roles of the people and the Courts, equality and sovereignty.