A Critical Review of the Capability Approach in Australian Indigenous Policy
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Authors
Klein, Elise
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Australian National University
Abstract
The capability approach has recently been used in Australian Indigenous
policy formation. Of particular note is how it has been used in some
instances to justify current paternalistic and directive policies for Indigenous
Australians. These include behavioural conditionalities on state support
and income management—policy apparatuses that aim to create individual
responsibility and to re-engineer the social norms of Indigenous people.
This interpretation of the capability approach is at odds with the writings
of Sen, because it overlooks the core concepts of freedom, agency and
pluralism. To examine this tension, this paper reviews the contestation
between capability scholars and commentators on Indigenous policy, paying
particular attention to four areas: human capability vs human capital, deficit
discourse, individual responsibility, and the ends and means of policy. Finally,
to reinvigorate the capability approach in Australian Indigenous policy, six
areas are suggested in which the capability approach could be used in the
future
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CAEPR Working Papers