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Housing Aboriginal culture in North-East Arnhem LandFantin, S. R. Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
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An Aboriginal Studies Resource Centre for the ACTBourke, Colin J., n/a January 1987 (has links)
The aim of this thesis is to provide a framework, background material and
argument for the A.C.T. Aboriginal community and other Aboriginal
educational and cultural groups to develop submissions seeking funds for
Aboriginal Studies Resource Centres. The ACT Aboriginal Education
Consultative Group has given the thesis a definite focus and underlined the
importance of gaining Aboriginal, systemic and political support.
The study includes both theoretical and empirical components and practical
suggestions as to the organisation and activities of such a centre. The
early part of the study is devoted to providing background to an Aboriginal
Studies Resource Centre, it also covers the formation and development of the
A.C.T. Aboriginal Education Consultative Group.
Following the outlining of the aims and objectives of such a centre,
theoretical issues concerned with selection and organisation of centre
materials, the need for interpretation of objectives and the understanding
of values together with curriculum implications and learning activities of
an Aboriginal studies resource centre are discussed. Two major thrusts in
these discussions are that Aboriginal people must be involved and the
question of values must be considered because human behaviour depends on
values, and behavioural change is regarded as one of the main measures of
success.
It is intended that while an Aboriginal Studies resource centre should
concentrate on its local area, it should draw materials from other parts of
Australia and the world, so that the local area can be placed in context.
It is envisaged that the materials would come from a wide range of
disciplines.
The A.C.T. Centre will endeavour to increase the comprehension of A.C.T.
Aborigines and non-Aborigines in matters Aboriginal, and will follow a
philosophy which holds that learning is the discovery of meaning or
understanding. A range of learning activities, including hands on
experiences are outlined. The functions of the Centre are described and the
involvement of Aborigines and non-Aborigines at all levels is discussed.
Evaluation of the Centre's success or otherwise will take cognisance of its
objectives and involve a range of outcomes. It is acknowledged that success
will be difficult to measure because of different amounts of student time
spent at the Centre and teacher and student expectations.
The thesis concludes that Aboriginal studies has not achieved its rightful
place in Australian education and that an Aboriginal Studies Resource Centre
would provide the material and human resources required for Aboriginal
studies to take its proper place in Australian education.
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Behind Closed Doors: Aboriginal Women's Experiences with Intimate Partner ViolenceAlani, Taslim 10 December 2010 (has links)
This study provides a critical analysis of Aboriginal women's experiences with intimate partner violence, and how this experience is affected by their lives on a reserve and their access to resources while there. By taking a social ecological perspective—looking at individual, interpersonal, community, institutional/organizational, and society/policy levels of the ecosystem—a comprehensive analysis can be done. The study explores the role of colonization in the development of today’s circumstances, and its associated factors. It analyzes the role of the government, both past and present, in perpetrating and enabling the problem. This study concludes by arguing that Aboriginal women's experiences are much more complex, needing more innovative and community-based initiatives in order to deal with its intracies. The Canadian government's attention and efforts thus far have fallen short of what is needed within many of Canada's Aboriginal communities.
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The indigenous living conditions problem: 'Need', policy construction and potential for changeThompson, Lester Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
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Unsettling Artifacts: Biopolitics, Cultural Memory, and the Public Sphere in a (Post)Settler ColonyGriffiths, Michael 05 June 2013 (has links)
My dissertation employed intellectual historian Michel Foucault’s notion of biopolitics—which can be most broadly parsed as the political organization of life—to examine the way the lives of Aboriginal people were regulated and surveilled in relation to settler European norms. The study is a focused investigation into a topic with global ramifications: the governance of race and sexuality and the effect of such governance on the production of apparently inclusive cultural productions within the public spheres. I argue that the way in which subaltern peoples have been governed in the past and the way their cultures have been appropriated continue to be in the present is not extraneous to but rather formative of what is often misleadingly called “the” public sphere of dominant societies.
In the second part, I analyze the legacies of this biopolitical moment and emphasize, particularly, the cultural politics of affect and trauma in relation to this (not quite) past.
Authors addressed include: Xavier Herbert, P. R. Stephensen, Rex Ingamells, Kim Scott, Alexis Wright, and others. I also examine Australian Aboriginal policy texts througout the twentieth century up to the "Bringing Them Home" Report (1997).
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"My Own Eyes Witness": Australian Aboriginal Women's Autobiographical NarrativesWatson, C. Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
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Waves of change : economic development and social wellbeing in Cardwell, North Queensland, AustraliaReif, Alison January 2008 (has links)
This thesis is an anthropological study of local understandings of economic development in a small regional town in far North Queensland, Australia. How do preferences regarding lifestyle and social wellbeing impact on those living in the community? The study takes a particular interest in the aspirations, values and choices of the residents and their desires for the future and the future of their town. Throughout this thesis I argue that social wellbeing and lifestyle are important factors in Cardwell residents' choices and feature predominantly in their approaches to economic development. I contextualise this study through a comparative analysis of the effects of economic development on the wellbeing and lifestyle of Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal people in the Cardwell region of north Australia. This comparison arises firstly from an anthropological interest in the circumstances of Australian Aboriginal people as a significant minority in regional towns. Explicit attention is directed toward the Aboriginal people of the Cardwell region as they constitute a socially and culturally distinct sector of the local population. Secondly, my study explores ways in which comparative work of this kind may be instructive on cultural issues relevant to economic development. This is a study of Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal people, who live in similar circumstances, and who, I propose, regard factors other than economic development as important. It is argued that while the Cardwell region does not provide ample nor a variety of economic opportunities, outward migration remains undesirable to many residents.
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Transforming the tourist : Aboriginal tourism as investment in cultural transversalityGalliford, Mark January 2009 (has links)
The thesis is an examination of Aboriginal cultural tourism based on interviews with national and international tourists. The research found that the opportunity for tourists to share personal intimacy with Aboriginal people often outweighed the attraction to the cultural aspects of the tours and that this can contribute to the discourse of reconciliation.
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The Indigenous living conditions problem: 'Need', policy construction, and potential for changeThompson, Lester Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
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Indigenous knowledge and higher education: Instigating relational education in a neocolonial contextSheehan, Norman Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
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