Mini Map

Indigenous peoples globally

ATS3634

Synopsis

The unit introduces you to basic issues connected with indigeneity such as the first peoples concept; historical engagements with colonial or settler populations; the importance of distinctiveness to indigenous identities; and the importance and vulnerability of heritage in indigenous groups.

The unit extends these understandings by exploring the emergence of indigeneity as a global political movement. It examines the emergence of a global political discourse of indigeneity, as well as the implications of this emergence for domestic political regimes. By referring to African, Australian, Asian and American examples, it explores how indigenous groups have secured better outcomes by advocating for their causes in global institutions and networks in which an indigenous rights framework has taken shape. It explores the media forms and celebrity advocacy (such as the project of the rock star Sting in the Amazon) that made indigeneity a global concept; the problems occurring when indigeneity is valued as a political resource by groups; and the stress accompanying indigenous discourses which appear to replicate primordial movements.

Sourced from the Monash Handbook 2026.

Quick facts

Credit points
6
Level
3
Audience
Undergraduate
Type
Coursework
School
Faculty of Arts
Faculty
Human Geography Anthropology & Development Studies
Handbook year
2026

Prerequisites

No prereqs in the handbook graph.

What it unlocks

Nothing in the visible graph depends on this unit.

Offerings (1)

  • First semesterClayton · ON-CAMPUS

Listed in 6 areas of study

  • AnthropologyLevel 2 and 3 units
  • AnthropologyLevel 3 capstone units
  • Human geographyLevel 2 and 3 elective units
  • Human geographyLevel 2 and 3 elective units
  • Indigenous studiesLevel 2 and 3 elective units
  • Indigenous studiesLevel 2 and 3 elective units