Shireen Morris is McKenzie Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Melbourne Law School.
Shireen Morris combines her insight from her first hand involvement in the practical struggle for Aboriginal constitutional recognition with a scholarly legal analysis of the possibilities and pitfalls entailed in a range of options. This book provides essential ballast to the debate, explaining why we have got here, which routes have been closed off and what still needs to be done. * Professor Anne Twomey, University of Sydney * Shireen Morris draws on her unique combination of legal scholarship and political advocacy to put forward the case of reason and compromise in order to recognise Indigenous Australians in the Australian Constitution in a way that respects both Indigenous aspirations and the constitutional concerns of people across the political spectrum. In this ongoing conversation about constitutional reform, scholars and statesmen alike should take heed of the compelling voice of moderation that Shireen Morris brings to an otherwise fraught discussion - a discussion that desperately needs the insights of a book like this. * Professor Greg Craven AO GCSG, Vice-Chancellor and President of Australian Catholic University * (Praise for the author's previous writing) Shireen Morris has been one of the most passionate and courageous advocates for Indigenous people and their overdue recognition in the Australian Constitution. Anyone who has followed the debate will know of Shireen's articulate and persuasive advocacy ... [she] shows that reconciliation is not just about black and white. It's the responsibility of all Australians. * Noel Pearson, Founder of the Cape York Institute *