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If the market is the problem, is the hybrid economy the solution

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Curchin, Katherine

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ANU Press

Abstract

One of Jon Altman’s preoccupations in recent years has been the impact of neoliberal ideology on Indigenous affairs policy. He has been a critic of the policy goal of incorporating more Indigenous Australians in remote regions into the mainstream economy, believing that Indigenous Australians joining the labour market are destined for the least desirable place within it. He has also argued that the values orientation promoted by market society is at odds with the kin-based societies in which many Indigenous people live today. Altman maintains that an ideological commitment to the market has blinded many policymakers to the viable alternatives to market-based development in Australia’s north (Altman 2005: 122). His hybrid economy framework challenges the dominant way of thinking about economic development for Indigenous peoples by highlighting a range of productive activities currently performed by Indigenous groups in Australia’s north. These innovative activities occur within the intersection of the customary, market and state sectors of local economies. Livelihood strategies based on these activities enable Indigenous people who live in regions remote from urban centres to generate income while resisting the full commoditisation of their labour and their land.

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Engaging Indigenous Economy: Debating diverse approaches

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Engaging Indigenous Economy: Debating diverse approaches

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Open Access via publisher website

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