Welfare reform and Indigeneity in remote Australia: A toxic mix

Date

2018-08-01

Authors

Altman, Jon

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Abstract

n the past month I participated in two workshops. I used what I observed on my latest visit to Arnhem Land and what people were telling me to inform what I presented at the workshops. The first workshop explored issues around excessive consumption by industrialised societies globally and how this is harming human health and destroying the planet. Workshop participants asked how such ‘consumptogenic’ systems might be regulated for the global good? My job was to provide a case study from my research on consumption by Indigenous people in remote Australia. The second workshop looked at welfare reform in the past decade in remote Indigenous Australia. In this workshop I looked at how welfare reform by the Australian state after the NT Intervention was creatively destroying the economy and lifeways of groups in Arnhem Land who are looking to live on their lands and off its natural resources. Here I want to share some of what I said

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Land Rights News

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Newspaper/magazine article

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Open Access via publisher website

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DOI

Restricted until

2039-12-31