Dominic O’Sullivan

Dominic O’Sullivan is from the Te Rarawa and Ngati Kahu iwi of New Zealand. He is an Associate Professor of Political Science at Charles Sturt University, Australia, and an Adjunct Professor in the Centre for Maori Health Research at the Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand. ‘We Are All Here to Stay’ is his seventh book, the previous one, Indigeneity: A politics of potential - Australia, Fiji and New Zealand, was published in 2017 by Policy Press.

orcid https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1696-1802

‘We Are All Here to Stay’ »

Citizenship, Sovereignty and the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples

Authored by: Dominic O’Sullivan
Publication date: September 2020
In 2007, 144 UN member states voted to adopt a Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the US were the only members to vote against it. Each eventually changed its position. This book explains why and examines what the Declaration could mean for sovereignty, citizenship and democracy in liberal societies such as these. It takes Canadian Chief Justice Lamer’s remark that ‘we are all here to stay’ to mean that indigenous peoples are ‘here to stay’ as indigenous. The book examines indigenous and state critiques of the Declaration but argues that, ultimately, it is an instrument of significant transformative potential showing how state sovereignty need not be a power that is exercised over and above indigenous peoples. Nor is it reasonably a power that displaces indigenous nations’ authority over their own affairs. The Declaration shows how and why, and this book argues that in doing so, it supports more inclusive ways of thinking about how citizenship and democracy may work better. The book draws on the Declaration to imagine what non-colonial political relationships could look like in liberal societies.