2008
Climate impacts in remote communities in Northern Australia
Wednesday, 15 October 2008
Climate change will increasingly be impacting thousands of Indigenous Australians across northern Australia. But how much do we know about their exposure, sensitivity and capacity to adapt to these changes? This talk aims to tease out these questions and begin to identify what we do know about these issues, and importantly, what information we don’t yet have but which is vital to understand in order to strengthen resilience for these remote communities.
Are racial and ethnic minorities disadvantaged in Australia? Evidence from two randomised field experiments
Wednesday, 8 October 2008
We conduct a large-scale audit discrimination study in Australia, sending 5000 fake resumes to employers in response to online job advertisements. To denote ethnicity, we randomly changed names on the resumes, using them to denote Anglo-Saxon, Italian, Chinese, Middle Eastern, and Indigenous ethnicity. In all cases, we applied for entry-level jobs, and submitted a CV that showed that the candidate had attended high school in Australia.
Aboriginal Poverty: What's social capital got to do with it?
Wednesday, 1 October 2008
In this seminar I present some initial findings from a project entitled, 'The Social Context of Indigenous Poverty'. The research involved a series of interviews with Aboriginal people in urban and rural SE Australia on issues of poverty, social capital and social exclusion. In the paper I draw together Aboriginal perspectives on the meaning of poverty to reflect on the relevance of social capital concepts for understanding Aboriginal economic disadvantage.
Please note: This seminar is available in both Streaming Audio and MP3 formats.
'Yo, turn around and look at Yolngu people, we are here': Indigenous cultural festivals and wellbeing
Wednesday, 24 September 2008
This paper is a part of a larger ARC Linkage project, with the Telstra Foundation, that examines the immediate and longer-term impacts of selected Indigenous festivals on community wellbeing. In recent years wellbeing is a concept that has gained salience and urgency, indeed it has become standard currency in economic and political models of welfare and development. Concerns have been expressed about the indicators of wellbeing and the lack of recongnition that notions of health and wellbeing and socio-economic inclusion and exclusion are culturally constructed.
First Taste: History & Culture in Indigenous Alcohol Use
Thursday, 18 September 2008
The two speakers presenting this public lecture will challenge some of the common beliefs that surround Indigenous Australians and the history of grog, by discussing the findings of the newly released publication First Taste: How Indigenous Australians Learned About Grog by Dr Maggie Brady (published by the Alcohol Education and Rehabilitation Foundation). This publication will be released the morning before the lecture and is a series of six books.
The Northern Territory Intervention phase one: Mission accomplished in Central Australia?
Wednesday, 17 September 2008
The intervention is the most expensive attempt to change the relationship between remote Aboriginal Australia and the white nation, launched with a budget of $1.5 billion dollars. The Commonwealth government sought to restructure community economies, undertake health check programs for children, increase school attendance, restrict alcohol sales and quarantine income. At the same time the Northern Territory government terminated community councils and began implementing shires, resulting in an absence of community governance.
Submission to the House of Representatives Standing Committee on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Affairs Inquiry into developing Indigenous enterprises
Topical Issue 11 / 2008
September 2008 - Indigenous Enterprise
A submission to the House of Representatives Standing Committee on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Affairs Inquiry into developing Indigenous enterprises by Jon Altman and Kirrily Jordan. This submission highlights the emerging opportunities for Indigenous enterprise in natural resource management, including in the response to climate change, and the need to identify and support these activities.
[17 September 2008]
Effective Indigenous Involvement in The Living Murray – Introducing Use and Occupancy Mapping
Friday, 12 September 2008
The Living Murray Initiative recognises that the aspirations, interests and contributions of Indigenous people are an integral component of contemporary natural resource management and aims to take into account the social, economic and spiritual objectives of Indigenous communities for each of the Murray’s icon sites. In order to do this, The Living Murray’s Indigenous Partnerships Project is developing and implementing a consultation process that will enable Indigenous communities to effectively participate in the discussion about cultural and environmental flows.
Not yet Jerusalem: A preliminary assessment of Nunavut's first decade
Wednesday, 10 September 2008
The Canadian territory of Nunavut ('Our land' in Inuktitut) was created on April 1, 1999, after the 1993 Nunavut Land Claims Agreement (NLCA) resulted in the division of the Northwest Territories and the creation of a 13th jurisdiction at the provincial/territorial level. 85 per cent of Nunavut's population of 30,000 are Inuit, making Nunavut an example of 'effective self-government through public government.' While the population may be small, Nunavut makes up 20% of Canada - an area the size of Western Europe.
Submission to The Northern Territory Emergency Response Review
Topical Issue 10 / 2008
September 2008 - Northern Territory Intervention
A submission to The Northern Territory Emergency Response Review by Professor Jon Altman. This submission explores the current nature of policy making in the Northern Territory and the ongoing problems surrounding Indigenous economic development. It makes a number of evidence-based recommendations concerning the NTER policy framework.
[09 September 2008]
