TY - ELEC TI - History: Protection and segregation (1890s to the 1950s) AU - Aboriginal Australia Aboriginal People of NSW T2 - Working with Indigenous Australians AB - Working with Indigenous Australians Website DA - 2021/06/24/ PY - 2021 UR - http://www.workingwithindigenousaustralians.info/content/History_4_Protection.html Y2 - 2021/06/24/00:00:00 KW - History KW - Indigenous peoples ER - TY - JOUR TI - Insights into the indigenous-managed landscape in southeast Australia during the Holocene AU - Adeleye, M.A. AU - Haberle, S.G. AU - Hopf, F. AU - Harris, S. AU - McWethy, D.B. T2 - Vegetation History and Archaeobotany DA - 2023/// PY - 2023 DO - 10.1007/s00334-023-00918-0 VL - 32 IS - 4 SP - 419 EP - 427 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85153084790&doi=10.1007%2fs00334-023-00918-0&partnerID=40&md5=2e97ec3d26ec78cf5d07158062e0daf5 DB - Scopus ER - TY - JOUR TI - Infrastructure Governance in Times of Crises: A Research Agenda for Australian Cities AU - Alizadeh, Tooran AU - Clements, Rebecca AU - Legacy, Crystal AU - Searle, Glen AU - Kamruzzaman, Md. T2 - Urban Policy and Research AB - Planning should deliver urban infrastructures that nurture places and people. However, the misalignment between strategic plans and delivered projects reveals critical governance gaps, with little clarity surrounding for whom and what ends infrastructures serve. This positioning piece proposes an infrastructure governance research agenda focused on the integration of planning, funding, and social legitimacy of projects, and the reality of multiple ongoing crises. Most importantly, the proposed research agenda calls for a First Nation voice at the heart of infrastructure decision-making as part of the planning profession’s contribution to the Treaty process that Australia desperately needs to move forward. DA - 2022/01/02/ PY - 2022 DO - 10.1080/08111146.2022.2040980 DP - Taylor and Francis+NEJM VL - 40 IS - 1 SP - 1 EP - 14 SN - 0811-1146 ST - Infrastructure Governance in Times of Crises UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/08111146.2022.2040980 Y2 - 2023/05/09/01:17:59 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - Modelling six sustainable development transformations in Australia and their accelerators, impediments, enablers, and interlinkages AU - Allen, Cameron AU - Biddulph, Annabel AU - Wiedmann, Thomas AU - Pedercini, Matteo AU - Malekpour, Shirin T2 - Nature Communications AB - There is an urgent need to accelerate progress on the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and recent research has identified six critical transformations. It is important to demonstrate how these transformations could be practically accelerated in a national context and what their combined effects would be. Here we bridge national systems modelling with transformation storylines to provide an analysis of a Six Transformations Pathway for Australia. We explore important policies to accelerate progress, synergies and trade-offs, and conditions that determine policy success. We find that implementing policy packages to accelerate each transformation would boost performance on the SDGs by 2030 (+23% above the baseline). Policymakers can maximize transformation synergies through investments in energy decarbonization, resilience, social protection, and sustainable food systems, while managing trade-offs for income and employment. To overcome resistance to transformations, ambitious policy action will need to be underpinned by technological, social, and political enabling conditions.Global research has identified six critical transformations to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals by 2030. Here, Allen et al model all six transformations in a national context and discuss implications for accelerating progress on the goals. DA - 2024/// PY - 2024 DO - 10.1038/s41467-023-44655-4 VL - 15 IS - 1 SP - 594 LA - English UR - https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/modelling-six-sustainable-development/docview/2916279975/se-2?accountid=12372 AN - 2916279975 DB - Coronavirus Research Database; ProQuest Central KW - Australia KW - Context KW - Decarbonization KW - Modelling KW - Sciences: Comprehensive Works KW - Social protection KW - Sustainability KW - Sustainable development KW - Sustainable food system KW - Technology adoption KW - Tradeoffs KW - Transformations KW - Trends ER - TY - CHAP TI - Land rights and development in Australia: caring for, benefiting from, governing the indigenous estate AU - Altman, Jon T2 - Between Indigenous and Settler Governance AB - Australia is one of the world’s richest countries, its current affluence largely driven by a commodities boom. That affluence is mainly enjoyed by the settler majority population, not by the nation’s original inhabitants and their descendants, the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, or indigenous Australians. The national population of 22 million people inhabits a continent of 7.7 million square kilometres and shares a AUD $1.3 trillion economy as measured by gross domestic product. But according to all standard social indicators, there is a massive gap between indigenous and other Australians. The colonisation of Australia extinguished the indigenous hunter-gatherereconomy, rendering the surviving Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders marginal figures in the imposed capitalist economy. While early colonisation denied indigenous rights in land, from the 1970s progressive laws and judicial findings returned large tracts of remote land to indigenous ownership. Groups of indigenous people who could demonstrate continuity in traditions, customs and physical connection to unalienated land could regain title to their ancestral homelands. An indigenous territorial estate has resulted, now covering more than 20 per cent of the continent. Almost all of this land is in parts of the continent considered ‘remote’, hence its former ‘unalienated’ status owing to low commercial value. While the indigenous estate is enormous, only about 20 per cent of the indigenous population has been able to meet the legal tests of customary ownership and thus regain ownership of their pre-colonial estates. Indigenous people today live inter-culturally – that is, abiding by two sets ofvalue systems and social norms, western and non-western, capitalist and noncapitalist, with livelihood aspirations that encompass aspects of both. This duality of orientation is especially evident in ‘remote’ and ‘very remote’ Australia, where 99 per cent of the indigenous estate is located. On the indigenous estate, the indigenous economy is hybrid: a customary or non-market sector articulates with both market and state sectors. Across the indigenous estate, the forms of both interculturality and economic hybridity are diverse. DA - 2012/// PY - 2012 DP - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b4868612~S30 PB - Routledge SN - 978-0-203-08502-8 ST - Land rights and development in Australia UR - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b4868612~S30 KW - Urban and cultural heritage KW - Urban planning ER - TY - BOOK TI - Hunter-gatherers today: an Aboriginal economy in north Australia AU - Altman, Jon C. CN - GN667.N6 A48 1987 CY - Canberra DA - 1987/// PY - 1987 DP - K10plus ISBN SP - 251 PB - Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies SN - 978-0-85575-176-0 ST - Hunter-gatherers today KW - Indigenous knowledge KW - Indigenous peoples KW - Property KW - Urban planning ER - TY - GEN TI - Re-valuing Heritage AU - Australian Institute of Architects AB - Architect Victoria. The Official Journal of the Australian Institute of Architects Victorian Chapter. Summer 2020. DA - 2021/11/22/04:09:53 PY - 2021 LA - en PB - Australian Institute of Architects UR - https://issuu.com/architecture-chapter/docs/architectvictoria_summer_2020 Y2 - 2021/11/22/04:09:53 KW - Architecture ER - TY - ELEC TI - Aboriginal Plant Use and Technology AU - Australian National Botanic Gardens Education Services DA - 2000/// PY - 2000 UR - https://www.anbg.gov.au/gardens/education/programs/pdfs/aboriginal_plant_use_and_technology.pdf Y2 - 2020/09/01/00:00:00 KW - Landscape architecture ER - TY - JOUR TI - A shared history? Presenting Australia's post-contact indigenous past AU - Batten, Bronwyn T2 - Journal of Interpretation Research DA - 2005/// PY - 2005 DO - https://doi.org/10.1177/109258720501000103 VL - 10 IS - 1 SP - 31 EP - 48 J2 - Journal of Interpretation Research SN - 1092-5872 UR - https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/109258720501000103 KW - Urban and cultural heritage ER - TY - THES TI - From prehistory to history: shared perspectives in Australian heritage interpretation AU - Batten, Bronwyn DA - 2005/// PY - 2005 M3 - PhD Thesis PB - Macquarie Unversity UR - http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/445 KW - Heritage KW - Urban and cultural heritage ER - TY - THES TI - ‪From prehistory to history: shared perspectives in Australian heritage interpretation‬ AU - Batten, Bronwyn DA - 2005/// PY - 2005 DP - https://figshare.mq.edu.au/articles/thesis/From_prehistory_to_history_shared_perspectives_in_Australian_heritage_interpretation/19441691 M3 - PhD Thesis PB - Macquarie University ST - ‪From prehistory to history UR - https://doi.org/10.25949/19441691.v1 KW - Urban and cultural heritage ER - TY - JOUR TI - Housing Affordability and Planning in Australia: The Challenge of Policy Under Neo-liberalism AU - Beer, Andrew AU - Kearins, Bridget AU - Pieters, Hans T2 - Housing Studies AB - Housing affordability has once again appeared on the policy agenda of Australian governments. House prices have risen in response to booming demand and constraints on the supply of dwellings, especially a shortage of land in the capital cities and skill shortages within the housing industry. Many young and low-income households have experienced great difficulty in gaining access to homeownership and in being able to afford private rental housing. This paper briefly considers the characteristics of public debate around housing affordability in Australia. It examines the role of neo-liberalism in shaping policy responses to housing affordability problems and assesses the argument that affordability goals can be achieved through manipulation of the planning system. It contends that neo-liberal philosophies of government direct policy action to the planning system, but such strategies have a limited capacity to improve housing affordability. Australian governments need to adopt more effective housing policies if they are to meet the needs of the 700 000 to 1 million households who live in unaffordable housing. DA - 2007/01/01/ PY - 2007 DO - 10.1080/02673030601024572 DP - Taylor and Francis+NEJM VL - 22 IS - 1 SP - 11 EP - 24 SN - 0267-3037 ST - Housing Affordability and Planning in Australia UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/02673030601024572 Y2 - 2023/05/09/01:13:27 KW - Architecture KW - Property ER - TY - JOUR TI - Reciprocal Repossession: Property as Land in Urban Australia AU - Blatman-Thomas, N. T2 - Antipode DA - 2019/// PY - 2019 DO - 10.1111/anti.12570 VL - 51 IS - 5 SP - 1395 EP - 1415 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85071745265&doi=10.1111%2fanti.12570&partnerID=40&md5=dd64c50fa15a2180bc253a6291cb0a69 DB - Scopus KW - Australia KW - Property ER - TY - JOUR TI - Reciprocal repossession: Property as land in urban Australia AU - Blatman‐Thomas, Naama T2 - Antipode DA - 2019/// PY - 2019 VL - 51 IS - 5 SP - 1395 EP - 1415 J2 - Antipode SN - 0066-4812 UR - https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&AuthType=sso&db=a9h&AN=138990205&site=ehost-live&custid=s2775460 KW - Property ER - TY - BOOK TI - 1835: the founding of Melbourne & the conquest of Australia AU - Boyce, James CN - 994.51 BOYC CY - Collingwood, Vic DA - 2011/// PY - 2011 DP - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b4079696~S30 SP - 257 PB - Black Inc SN - 978-1-86395-475-4 ST - 1835 UR - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b4079696~S30 KW - Colonization KW - History ER - TY - JOUR TI - Othering, power relations, and indigenous tourism: Experiences in Australia’s Northern Territory AU - Bresner, Katie T2 - PlatForum DA - 2010/// PY - 2010 VL - 11 SP - 10 EP - 26 J2 - PlatForum SN - 1923-6549 UR - https://journals.uvic.ca/index.php/platforum/article/view/2197 KW - Urban and cultural heritage ER - TY - JOUR TI - The building story: Architecture and inclusive design in remote Aboriginal Australian communities AU - Broffman, Andrew T2 - The Design Journal DA - 2015/// PY - 2015 DO - 10.2752/175630615X14135446523341 VL - 18 IS - 1 SP - 107 EP - 134 ST - The building story UR - https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.2752/175630615X14135446523341 KW - Architecture ER - TY - JOUR TI - ‘An edifying spectacle’: A history of ‘tourist corroborees’ in Victoria, Australia, 1835–1870 AU - Cahir, David A. AU - Clark, Ian D. T2 - Tourism Management AB - Parsons [Parsons, M. (2002). “Ah that I could convey a proper idea of this interesting wild play of the natives” corroborees and the rise of indigenous Australian cultural tourism. Australian Aboriginal Studies, 2(1), 14–27.] has persuasively argued that nineteenth century corroborees performed for non-indigenous audiences may be considered to be Australia's pre-eminent prototypical indigenous cultural tourism product. This paper extends Parsons' [Parsons, M. (1997). The tourist corroboree in South Australia. Aboriginal History, 21(1), 46–69; Parsons, M. (2002). “Ah that I could convey a proper idea of this interesting wild play of the natives” corroborees and the rise of indigenous Australian cultural tourism. Australian Aboriginal Studies, 2(1), 14–27.] analyses of ‘tourist corroborees’ in nineteenth century South Australia to corroborees staged in Victoria during the pastoral period and the gold rushes of the 1850–1870s. It argues that an Aboriginal-grown ‘business acumen’ developed rapidly in the economic climate of the Victorian goldfields. It also provides a historical context to this commodification. DA - 2010/06/01/ PY - 2010 DO - 10.1016/j.tourman.2009.04.009 DP - ScienceDirect VL - 31 IS - 3 SP - 412 EP - 420 J2 - Tourism Management LA - en SN - 0261-5177 ST - ‘An edifying spectacle’ UR - https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S026151770900082X Y2 - 2021/08/23/23:50:50 KW - Urban and cultural heritage ER - TY - JOUR TI - Bouncing back? Kangaroo-human resistance in contemporary Australia AU - Chao, Sophie T2 - Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space AB - This article explores how human and animal agencies shape the socio-ecological lifeworlds of kangaroos as cultural icons, native wildlife, problematic pests, and commercial meat in contemporary Australia. Kangaroos’ resistance to Western, colonial ways of knowing and ordering the world fundamentally challenged the classificatory logic and foundations of early natural science. Kangaroos’ biological and behavioral resistance to domestication and farming – the traditional loci of animal exploitation – speaks to their inherent wildness, at the same time as it reveals their complicated dependence on ecosystems adapted for introduced livestock. Meanwhile, kangaroos’ resistance to government-endorsed population control programs, and the contested logic of (over)abundance that justifies kangaroo culling, both challenges and legitimates human calculations of who and what “counts” as worth conserving or killing. In tandem, the sensorial and symbolic valences of kangaroo flesh, compounded with the growing voices of animal welfare movements, generate visceral and political resistance to kangaroo meat as an unpalatable foodstuff. The article further centers the polysemic valences of kangaroos as a form of resistance to symbolic unity and coherence. Existing as many things at once, kangaroos eschew classification and treatment as any one thing. Instead, their ontology multiplies across the many epistemologies vying to determine kangaroos’ actual being and future becoming. The article concludes by assessing the opportunities and challenges of centering resistance and its diverse epistemic, vitalist, symbolic, and carnal manifestations to understand animal lifeways and deathways amidst entrenched capitalist and colonial regimes, whose reproduction depends on the production of the non-human as “killable.” DA - 2023/03// PY - 2023 DO - 10.1177/25148486221084194 DP - journals.sagepub.com (Atypon) VL - 6 IS - 1 SP - 331 EP - 354 SN - 2514-8486 ST - Bouncing back? UR - https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/25148486221084194 Y2 - 2023/05/09/00:04:42 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - What Happened to Kangaroo Grass? Human Agents and Endemic Grassy Ecosystems in South-Western Australia AU - Chevis, H. AU - Dortch, J. AU - Webb, W. AU - Webb, I. T2 - Australian Historical Studies DA - 2023/// PY - 2023 DO - 10.1080/1031461X.2022.2087700 VL - 54 IS - 1 SP - 125 EP - 152 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85147393478&doi=10.1080%2f1031461X.2022.2087700&partnerID=40&md5=86e5ede0e48686744fecbe93147749a4 DB - Scopus ER - TY - JOUR TI - Culture wars, local government, and the Australia day controversy: Insights from urban politics research AU - Chou, Mark AU - Busbridge, Rachel T2 - Urban Policy and Research DA - 2019/// PY - 2019 DO - https://doi.org/10.1080/08111146.2019.1631786 VL - 37 IS - 3 SP - 367 EP - 377 J2 - Urban Policy and Research SN - 0811-1146 UR - tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/08111146.2019.1631786 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - The aboriginal ethnobotany of the Adelaide region, south Australia AU - Clarke, Philip A. T2 - Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia DA - 2013/// PY - 2013 DO - https://doi.org/10.1080/3721426.2013.10887175 VL - 137 IS - 1 SP - 97 EP - 126 UR - https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/3721426.2013.10887175 KW - Landscape architecture ER - TY - BOOK TI - Flora of Australia Volume 48 Ferns, Gymnosperms and Allied Groups AU - Commonwealth of Australia DA - 1998/// PY - 1998 DP - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b2514966~S30 PB - Commonwealth of Australia UR - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b2514966~S30 KW - Landscape architecture ER - TY - JOUR TI - Exploration of the Burning Question: A Long History of Fire in Eastern Australia with and without People AU - Constantine, M. AU - Williams, A.N. AU - Francke, A. AU - Cadd, H. AU - Forbes, M. AU - Cohen, T.J. AU - Zhu, X. AU - Mooney, S.D. T2 - Fire DA - 2023/// PY - 2023 DO - 10.3390/fire6040152 VL - 6 IS - 4 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85154616992&doi=10.3390%2ffire6040152&partnerID=40&md5=18b6fd0f85c7570561d4acdd88313c85 DB - Scopus ER - TY - BOOK TI - Getting started; an introduction to growing and propagating Australian native plants. AU - Cooper, S DA - 2003/// PY - 2003 PB - Australian Plants Society UR - http://anpsa.org.au/ANPSA/started.pdf KW - Landscape architecture ER - TY - BOOK TI - Ethical Conduct in Research with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples and Communities: Guidelines for Researchers and Stakeholders AU - Council (Australia), National Health and Medical Research AB - This document updates the 2003 guidelines 'Values and ethics: guidelines on ethical conduct in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health research.' They provide a set of principles to ensure research is safe, respectful, responsible, high quality and of benefit to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and communities. The Guidelines defines six core values: spirit and integrity, cultural continuity, equity, reciprocity, respect, and responsibility. The Guidelines are intended for use by researchers and ethics review bodies, such as Human Research Ethics Committees (HRECs). Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples, individual research participants, participant groups, the wider community and other stakeholders may also find the Guidelines useful. [Publisher summary] DA - 2018/// PY - 2018 SP - 29 LA - en PB - National Health and Medical Research Council SN - 978-1-86496-007-5 ST - Ethical Conduct in Research with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples and Communities KW - Indigenous peoples ER - TY - JOUR TI - Community Land Trusts and Indigenous Housing in Australia—Exploring Difference-Based Policy and Appropriate Housing AU - Crabtree, Louise T2 - Housing Studies AB - Previous work has highlighted the primacy of non-economic rights in Indigenous housing objectives. This paper builds on that work and Sanders' other work demonstrating the limited relevance of ‘mainstream’ home ownership for many Indigenous communities, exploring whether models based on community land trust (CLT) principles might be appropriate for articulating Indigenous housing aspirations. The paper describes current Indigenous housing scenarios in urban, regional and remote New South Wales and Queensland, and findings regarding the resonance of CLTs with Indigenous housing objectives. While dominant policy and public discourses promote Indigenous home ownership as an economic development strategy, or as requiring the alienation of Indigenous lands, the research found neither to be primary sector imperatives. The paper draws on difference-based arguments regarding Indigenous affairs arguing that a focus on diversity emerging from informed Indigenous choice finds a role for policy supporting diverse Indigenous housing aspirations. DA - 2014/08/18/ PY - 2014 DO - 10.1080/02673037.2014.898248 DP - Taylor and Francis+NEJM VL - 29 IS - 6 SP - 743 EP - 759 SN - 0267-3037 UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2014.898248 Y2 - 2023/05/09/01:13:21 KW - Architecture KW - Property ER - TY - JOUR TI - Professionalisation and the spectacle of nature: Understanding changes in the visual imaginaries of private protected area organisations in Australia AU - Damiens, Florence LP AU - Davison, Aidan AU - Cooke, Benjamin T2 - Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space AB - Imaginaries of protected areas as state-based fortresses have been challenged by expansion of the global nature conservation estate on non-government lands, notably in contexts such as Australia where neoliberal reform has been strong. Little is known about the implications of this change for the meanings, purposes and practices of nature conservation. Images are central to public understandings of nature conservation. We thus investigate the visual communication of environmental non-government organisations (ENGOs) involved in private protected areas in Australia, with particular focus on Bush Heritage Australia (BHA). We employ a three-part design encompassing quantitative and qualitative methods to study the visual imaginaries underlying nature conservation in BHA's magazines and the web homepages of it and four other ENGOs over 2004–2020. We find that visual imaginaries changed across time, as ENGOs went through an organisational process of professionalisation comprising three dynamics: legitimising, marketising, and differentiating. An imaginary of dedicated Western volunteer groups protecting scenic wilderness was replaced by the spectacle of uplifting and intimate individual encounters with native nature. Amenable to working within rather than transforming dominant political-economic structures, the new imaginary empowers professional ENGOs and their partners as primary carers of nature. It advertises a mediated access to spectacular nature that promises positive emotions and redemption for environmental wrongs to financial supporters of ENGOs. These findings reveal the role of non-government actors under neoliberal conditions in the use of visual representations to shift the meanings, purposes and practices of nature conservation. DA - 2022/10/18/ PY - 2022 DO - 10.1177/25148486221129418 DP - journals.sagepub.com (Atypon) SP - 25148486221129418 SN - 2514-8486 ST - Professionalisation and the spectacle of nature UR - https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/25148486221129418 Y2 - 2023/05/09/00:04:39 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - What’s next for Australia’s water management? AU - Daniell, Katherine A. AU - Daniell, Trevor M. T2 - Australasian Journal of Water Resources AB - Australia’s water management futures are again under discussion as drought impacts and bushfires hit communities. Water and ecological system limits are being reached resulting in fish kills and dwindling water levels in storages. Awareness is also rising around the inequities in current water governance regimes for First Peoples across the Australian continent and beyond. Here we provide a brief overview and research on: the ingenuity of Indigenous waterscape and landscape knowledge and practices to care for country and community, including the development of agricultural systems and sophisticated fish and eel trapping systems that are thousands of years old; the devastating impacts of colonisation on First Peoples, their country and ability to maintain some cultural practices; and the ongoing contestation over water governance, right from Federation, including the eight waves of water reforms in the Murray-Darling Basin. Current challenges and needs for reform are also presented including: hydrological scientific uncertainties, such as around return flows and their adjustment due to irrigation infrastructure efficiency increases, and new design methodologies, such as for flood estimation inputs to hydraulic models; adjusting current governance regimes of sustainable diversion limits and water markets to provide alternative value to Australia, beyond economic value drivers, that better respond to the benefit of all basin communities in the face of ongoing extreme climate variability and climate change; and determining positive ways forward for truly valuing and allowing First Peoples’ knowledge, practices, culture and law to provide a basis for developing the next waves of Australia's water management reform journey. DA - 2019/07/03/ PY - 2019 DO - 10.1080/13241583.2019.1696033 DP - Taylor and Francis+NEJM VL - 23 IS - 2 SP - 69 EP - 77 SN - 1324-1583 UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/13241583.2019.1696033 Y2 - 2023/05/09/01:28:22 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - A property rights schema for cultural flows in the Murray Darling Basin, Australia AU - Davies, S. AU - Marshall, G.R. AU - Ridges, M. T2 - Australasian Journal of Environmental Management DA - 2023/// PY - 2023 DO - 10.1080/14486563.2023.2281562 VL - 30 IS - 3-4 SP - 393 EP - 415 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85182695121&doi=10.1080%2f14486563.2023.2281562&partnerID=40&md5=a3b678c576f990376f5a8f42f742643a DB - Scopus ER - TY - JOUR TI - Integrating Indigenous enterprises into the Australian construction industry AU - Denny-Smith, George AU - Loosemore, Martin T2 - Engineering, construction and architectural management DA - 2017/// PY - 2017 DO - 10.1108/ECAM-01-2016-0001 J2 - Engineering, construction and architectural management SN - 0969-9988 UR - https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/ECAM-01-2016-0001/full/html KW - Construction ER - TY - CONF TI - Assessing the impact of Australia's indigenous procurement policy using strain theory AU - Denny-Smith, George AU - Loosemore, Martin T2 - Proceeding of the 33rd Annual ARCOM Conference DA - 2017/// PY - 2017 VL - 4 SP - 6 UR - https://www.researchgate.net/profile/George-Denny-Smith/publication/331701927_Assessing_the_impact_of_Australia's_Indigenous_procurement_policy_using_Strain_Theory/links/5c88921292851c1df93d590b/Assessing-the-impact-of-Australias-Indigenous-procurement-policy-using-Strain-Theory.pdf KW - Construction ER - TY - VIDEO TI - Shiptons Flat Project- EWB AU - EWBAustralia AB - Shiptons Flat Amenities Project. Cape York Australia. A collaboration of CAT, EWB, Aurecon, Arup, SKM and ICV. for more details see www.ewb.org.au DA - 2012/07/10/ PY - 2012 DP - YouTube UR - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y1KPtca2AYA Y2 - 2021/10/04/23:28:30 KW - Architecture ER - TY - CHAP TI - UNSETTLEMENT, CLIMATE AND RURAL/URBAN PLACE-MAKING IN AUSTRALIAN CRIME FICTION AU - Fetherston, R. T2 - The Routledge Handbook of Crime Fiction and Ecology DA - 2023/// PY - 2023 SP - 78 EP - 90 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85174081672&doi=10.4324%2f9781003091912-8&partnerID=40&md5=5e158142774b28f380436386b90ca5fd DB - Scopus ER - TY - JOUR TI - The loss of an indigenous constructed landscape following British invasion of Australia: An insight into the deep human imprint on the Australian landscape AU - Fletcher, Michael-Shawn AU - Hall, Tegan AU - Alexandra, Andreas Nicholas T2 - Ambio AB - Indigenous people play an integral role in shaping natural environments, and the disruption to Indigenous land management practices has profound effects on the biosphere. Here, we use pollen, charcoal and dendrochronological analyses to demonstrate that the Australian landscape at the time of British invasion in the 18th century was a heavily constructed one—the product of millennia of active maintenance by Aboriginal Australians. Focusing on the Surrey Hills, Tasmania, our results reveal how the removal of Indigenous burning regimes following British invasion instigated a process of ecological succession and the encroachment of cool temperate rainforest (i.e. later-stage vegetation communities) into grasslands of conservation significance. This research provides empirical evidence to challenge the long-standing portrayal of Indigenous Australians as low-impact ‘hunter-gatherers’ and highlights the relevance and critical value of Indigenous fire management in this era of heightened bushfire risk and biodiversity loss. DA - 2020/05/06/ PY - 2020 DO - 10.1007/s13280-020-01339-3 DP - Springer Link J2 - Ambio LA - D10: Wiradjuri, wrh; SN - 1654-7209 ST - The loss of an indigenous constructed landscape following British invasion of Australia UR - https://doi.org/10.1007/s13280-020-01339-3 Y2 - 2020/10/30/05:37:00 KW - Landscape architecture KW - Urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - Understanding energy-related regimes: A participatory approach from central Australia AU - Foran, Tira AU - Fleming, David AU - Spandonide, Bruno AU - Williams, Rachel AU - Race, Digby T2 - Energy policy DA - 2016/// PY - 2016 DO - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.enpol.2016.01.014 VL - 91 SP - 315 EP - 324 J2 - Energy policy SN - 0301-4215 UR - https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0301421516300131 KW - Construction ER - TY - BOOK TI - Frontier conflict: the Australian experience A3 - Foster, S. G. A3 - Attwood, Bain A3 - National Museum of Australia AB - Based on a forum held at the National Museum in Canberra this book presents a series of essays by leading contributors on the subject of conflict between Aboriginesand settlers CN - DU115 .F76 2003 CY - Canberra DA - 2003/// PY - 2003 DP - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b2825143~S2 SP - 218 LA - eng PB - National Museum of Australia SN - 978-1-876944-11-7 ST - Frontier conflict UR - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b2825143~S2 KW - Indigenous peoples ER - TY - JOUR TI - A transformative mission for prioritising nature in Australian cities AU - Frantzeskaki, N. AU - Oke, C. AU - Barnett, G. AU - Bekessy, S. AU - Bush, J. AU - Fitzsimons, J. AU - Ignatieva, M. AU - Kendal, D. AU - Kingsley, J. AU - Mumaw, L. AU - Ossola, A. T2 - Ambio DA - 2022/// PY - 2022 DO - 10.1007/s13280-022-01725-z VL - 51 IS - 6 SP - 1433 EP - 1445 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85127315396&doi=10.1007%2fs13280-022-01725-z&partnerID=40&md5=e31f0d9f69f7e94a54e637ab085af676 DB - Scopus KW - Indigenous knowledge KW - Urban planning ER - TY - CHAP TI - Reconciling the Australian Square AU - Johnson, Fiona Claire AU - Walliss, Jillian T2 - The politics of design: privilege and prejudice in Aotearoa New Zealand, Australia and South Africa A2 - Freschi, Federico A2 - Venis, Jane A2 - Nazier, Farieda A2 - Russell, Khyla J. A2 - Hopewell, Hannah A2 - Carter, Lyn A2 - Miller, Suzanne Claire A2 - Krishnan, Teresa A2 - McCaw, Caroline A2 - Galloway, Matthew A2 - Wilson, Jani Katarina Taituha A2 - Campbell, Donna CN - N8213 .P65 2021 CY - Dunedin [New Zealand] DA - 2021/// PY - 2021 PB - Otago Polytechnic Press SN - 978-0-908846-66-5 978-0-908846-67-2 UR - https://issuu.com/opresearch/docs/the_politics_of_design/s/14691877 ER - TY - BOOK TI - The politics of design: privilege and prejudice in Aotearoa New Zealand, Australia and South Africa A3 - Freschi, Federico A3 - Venis, Jane A3 - Nazier, Farieda A3 - Russell, Khyla J. A3 - Hopewell, Hannah A3 - Carter, Lyn A3 - Miller, Suzanne Claire A3 - Krishnan, Teresa A3 - McCaw, Caroline A3 - Galloway, Matthew A3 - Wilson, Jani Katarina Taituha A3 - Campbell, Donna CN - N8213 .P65 2021 CY - Dunedin [New Zealand] DA - 2021/// PY - 2021 DP - Library of Congress ISBN SP - 399 PB - Otago Polytechnic Press SN - 978-0-908846-66-5 978-0-908846-67-2 ST - The politics of design ER - TY - JOUR TI - Indigenous and modern biomaterials derived from Triodia (‘spinifex’) grasslands in Australia AU - Gamage, Harshi K. AU - Mondal, Subrata AU - Wallis, Lynley A. AU - Memmott, Paul AU - Martin, Darren AU - Wright, Boyd R. AU - Schmidt, Susanne T2 - Australian Journal of Botany DA - 2012/// PY - 2012 DO - 10.1071/BT11285 VL - 60 IS - 2 SP - 114 EP - 127 UR - https://www-publish-csiro-au.eu1.proxy.openathens.net/bt/BT11285 KW - Landscape architecture ER - TY - BOOK TI - The Biggest Estate on Earth: How Aborigines Made Australia AU - Gammage, Bill AB - Reveals the complex, country-wide systems of land management used by Aboriginal people in presettlement Australia Across Australia, early Europeans commented again and again that the land looked like a park, with extensive grassy patches and pathways, open woodlands, and abundant wildlife. Bill Gammage has discovered this was because Aboriginal people managed the land in a far more systematic and scientific fashion than most people have ever realized. For more than a decade, he has examined written and visual records of the Australian landscape. He has uncovered an extraordinarily complex system of land management using fire, the life cycles of native plants, and the natural flow of water to ensure plentiful wildlife and plant foods throughout the year. Aboriginal people spent far less time and effort than Europeans in securing food and shelter, and this book reveals how. Once Aboriginal people were no longer able to tend their country, it became overgrown and vulnerable to the hugely damaging bushfires Australians now experience. With details of land-management strategies from around Australia, this book rewrites the history of the continent, with huge implications for today. DA - 2012/// PY - 2012 DP - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b4185968~S2 SP - 464 LA - en PB - Allen & Unwin SN - 978-1-74331-132-5 ST - The Biggest Estate on Earth UR - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b4185968~S2 KW - Landscape architecture KW - Urban and cultural heritage ER - TY - ELEC TI - Australia Present Vegetation Map AU - GeoScience Australia DA - 2009/01/01/ PY - 2009 UR - https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/c5/Australia_Present_Vegetation_Map.png Y2 - 2020/09/01/00:00:00 KW - Landscape architecture ER - TY - BOOK TI - Repatriation of Indigenous Cultural Heritage: Experiences of Return in Central Australia AU - Gibson, J.M. T2 - Repatriation of Indigenous Cultural Heritage: Experiences of Return in Central Australia DA - 2023/// PY - 2023 SP - 1 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85165411180&doi=10.4324%2f9781003158752&partnerID=40&md5=98d03911102cf1fcaf3a9a468407b07e DB - Scopus KW - Urban and cultural heritage ER - TY - JOUR TI - Social (In)justice, climate change and climate policy in Western Australia AU - Godden, Naomi Joy AU - Wijekoon, Doreen AU - Wrigley, Kylie T2 - Environmental Sociology AB - Climate change is a social justice issue, and people who experience disadvantage and marginalisation are most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change. In 2019–2020, the government of the state of Western Australia (WA) held the world’s first inquiry into climate change and health. The Inquiry report, submissions, and hearing transcripts make an important contribution to a small but growing body of evidence that climate change exacerbates and reinforces existing social inequalities in WA in areas such as health, economics, gender relations, and access and inclusion. However, in late-2020, the WA government released its 38-page Climate Policy, with very limited reference to social justice and only one use of the word ‘people’. Our critical intersectional feminist analysis finds a prevailing dissonance between climate evidence and climate policy in WA. Climate governance in WA is ill prepared, if not unwilling, to support people who experience disadvantage and are on the frontlines of the climate crisis. There is an urgent need for policies and actions to address multiple dimensions of inequality under climate change, across the fields of climate change mitigation, adaptation, and disaster response. DA - 2022/10/02/ PY - 2022 DO - 10.1080/23251042.2022.2069216 DP - Taylor and Francis+NEJM VL - 8 IS - 4 SP - 377 EP - 387 SN - null UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/23251042.2022.2069216 Y2 - 2023/05/09/01:00:05 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - CHAP TI - ABOLISHING YOUTH DETENTION CENTERS: Rethinking Architectural Models for Australian Children and Young People under Legal Custodial Orders AU - Grant, E. AU - de Belle, B. T2 - The Routledge Handbook on the Influence of Built Environments on Diverse Childhoods DA - 2024/// PY - 2024 SP - 337 EP - 351 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85200863310&doi=10.4324%2f9781003284406-28&partnerID=40&md5=ca8bec0019b7cfb24c87171232f30922 DB - Scopus ER - TY - BOOK TI - Quarterly Essay 64 The Australian Dream: Blood, History and Becoming AU - Grant, Stan AB - In a landmark essay, Stan Grant writes Indigenous people back into the economic and multicultural history of Australia. This is the fascinating story of how fringe dwellers fought not just to survive, but to prosper. Their legacy is the extraordinary flowering of Indigenous success – cultural, sporting, intellectual and social – that we see today. Yet this flourishing co-exists with the boys of Don Dale, and the many others like them who live in the shadows of the nation. Grant examines how such Australians have been denied the possibilities of life, and argues eloquently that history is not destiny; that culture is not static. In doing so, he makes the case for a more capacious Australian Dream. ‘The idea that I am Australian hits me with a thud. It is a blinding self-realisation that collides with the comfortable notion of who I am. To be honest, for an Indigenous person, it can feel like a betrayal somehow – at the very least, a capitulation. We are so used to telling ourselves that Australia is a white country: am I now white? The reality is more ambiguous ... To borrow from Franz Kafka, identity is a cage in search of a bird.’ —Stan Grant, The Australian Dream DA - 2016/11/21/ PY - 2016 DP - Google Books SP - 134 LA - en PB - Black Inc. SN - 978-1-925435-36-8 ST - Quarterly Essay 64 The Australian Dream ER - TY - JOUR TI - Sustaining housing through planned maintenance in remote Central Australia AU - Grealy, Liam AU - Lea, Tess AU - Moskos, Megan AU - Benedict, Richard AU - Habibis, Daphne AU - King, Stephanie T2 - Housing Studies AB - Once housing is constructed, its sustainability depends on the efficacy of property maintenance. In remote Indigenous communities in Australia, responsive or reactive approaches to property maintenance dominate over planned and preventive attention, leaving housing in various states of disrepair. By documenting an approach that is succeeding in this wider context, this article shows the commonplace situation of poorly maintained social housing is entirely interruptible. It does so by examining an alternative and exceptional approach taken on the remote Aṉangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara (APY) Lands in South Australia, where housing benefits from a planned maintenance program combined with an environmental health program. Through detailed empirical analysis of program datasets, interviews, and ethnographic fieldwork, this article describes the expert, systematic, and attentive work required to sustain functional housing in the wider context of undersupply, crowding, and challenging environmental conditions. We argue for the necessity of planned maintenance approaches as an essential component of sustainable housing, both to extend the life of housing assets and to ensure householder health and wellbeing. DA - 2022/06/14/ PY - 2022 DO - 10.1080/02673037.2022.2084045 DP - Taylor and Francis+NEJM VL - 0 IS - 0 SP - 1 EP - 23 SN - 0267-3037 UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2022.2084045 Y2 - 2023/05/09/01:13:31 KW - Architecture KW - Indigenous housing policy KW - Maintenance KW - Property KW - environmental health KW - healthy housing KW - housing quality KW - sustainability ER - TY - BOOK TI - Broken spears: Aborigines and Europeans in the southwest of Australia AU - Green, Neville AB - Nyungar lifestyle; impact of exploration and settlement on Aborigines 1616-1852; violent conflict, especially the Battle of Pinjarra; treatment by courts and Rottnest Island Aboriginal Prison; use of Aboriginal labour; major epidemics and illnesses; missions; seizure of land CN - 994.1202 CY - Perth [W.A.] DA - 1984/// PY - 1984 DP - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au/record=b1370545~S30 SP - 238 PB - Focus Education Services SN - 978-0-9591828-1-1 ST - Broken spears UR - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au/record=b1370545~S30 KW - History ER - TY - CHAP TI - Designing Australia - critical engagement with Indigenous placemaking AU - Greenaway, Jefa AU - McGaw, J AU - Wallis, J T2 - Design for a complex world: challenges in practice and education CY - Oxfordshire DA - 2014/// PY - 2014 DP - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b6360407~S2 SP - 29 EP - 54 PB - Libri UR - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b6360407~S2 KW - Architecture KW - Landscape architecture KW - Urban design ER - TY - JOUR TI - Venice Biennale 2020 Australian Pavilion preview: In between AU - Greenaway, Jefa AU - Wong, Tristan AU - Richardson, Anthony T2 - Architecture Australia AB - Tristan Wong (SJB) and Jefa Greenaway (Greenaway Architects) have been selected by the Australian Institute of Architects as the creative directors for Australia’s pavilion at the 2020 Venice Architecture Biennale. Compelled by the theme set by Biennale curator, Hashim Sarkis, of “How will we live together?”, Wong and Greenaway will collaborate with Australia’s Pacific neighbours in a response that represents non-Indigenous and Indigenous ideologies simultaneously. “Architecture Australia” caught up with the creative directors soon after their selection. DA - 2020/01/01/ PY - 2020 DP - Informit VL - 109 IS - 1 SP - 112 EP - 113 LA - English SN - 0003-8725 UR - https://search.informit.org/doi/10.3316/ielapa.976466563136896 AN - ielapa.976466563136896 Y2 - 2023/05/08/00:00:00 KW - Architecture ER - TY - BOOK TI - Deep time dreaming: uncovering ancient Australia AU - Griffiths, Billy AB - People would have known about Australia before they saw it. Smoke billowing above the sea spoke of a land that lay beyond the horizon. A dense cloud of migrating birds may have pointed the way. But the first Australians were voyaging into the unknown. Soon after Billy Griffiths joins his first archaeological dig as camp manager and cook, he is hooked. Equipped with a historian's inquiring mind, he embarks on a journey through time, seeking to understand the extraordinary deep history of the Australian continent. Deep Time Dreaming is the passionate product of that journey. It investigates a twin revolution: the reassertion of Aboriginal identity in the second half of the twentieth century, and the uncovering of the traces of ancient Australia. It explores what it means to live in a place of great antiquity, with its complex questions of ownership and belonging. It is about a slow shift in national consciousness: the deep time dreaming that has changed the way many of us relate to this continent and its enduring, dynamic human history CN - GN666 .G743 2018 CY - Carlton, Victoria DA - 2018/// PY - 2018 DP - K10plus ISBN SP - 376 PB - Black Inc SN - 978-1-76064-044-6 ST - Deep time dreaming KW - Indigenous peoples ER - TY - JOUR TI - Australian Housing Policy, Misrecognition and Indigenous Population Mobility AU - Habibis, Daphne T2 - Housing Studies AB - Policy initiatives in remote Indigenous Australia aim to improve Indigenous health and well-being, and reduce homelessness. But they have raised controversy because they impinge on Indigenous aspirations to remain on homeland communities, require mainstreaming of Indigenous housing and transfer Indigenous land to the state. This paper uses recognition theory to argue that if policies of normalization are imposed on remote living Indigenous people in ways that take insufficient account of their cultural realities they may be experienced as a form of misrecognition and have detrimental policy effects. The paper examines the responses of remote living Indigenous people to the National Partnerships at the time of their introduction in 2009–2010. Drawing on interview and administrative data from a national study on Indigenous population mobility, the paper argues although the policies have been welcomed, they have also been a source of anxiety and anger. These feelings are associated with a sense of violated justice arising from experiences of misrecognition. The paper argues this can lead tenants to depart their homes as a culturally sanctioned form of resistance to state control. This population mobility is associated with homelessness because it takes place in the context of housing exclusion. Policy implications include developing new models of intercultural professional practice and employing a capacity-building approach to local Indigenous organisations. DA - 2013/07/01/ PY - 2013 DO - 10.1080/02673037.2013.759545 DP - Taylor and Francis+NEJM VL - 28 IS - 5 SP - 764 EP - 781 SN - 0267-3037 UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2013.759545 Y2 - 2023/05/09/01:13:24 KW - Architecture KW - Property ER - TY - JOUR TI - It is time for healthy living priorities to be integrated into Indigenous housing policy and practice: a reply to ‘Aboriginal social housing in remote Australia: crowded, unrepaired and raising the risk of infectious diseases’ by Paul Memmott et al AU - Habibis, D. T2 - Global Discourse DA - 2022/// PY - 2022 DO - 10.1332/204378921X16324314013439 VL - 12 IS - 2 SP - 285 EP - 288 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85130722089&doi=10.1332%2f204378921X16324314013439&partnerID=40&md5=b0ad145d159be018e429cec37b7be43a DB - Scopus KW - Indigenous housing KW - climate change KW - housing and health ER - TY - JOUR TI - Safe water and sanitation in remote Indigenous communities in Australia: conditions towards sustainable outcomes AU - Hall, Nina Lansbury AU - Abeysuriya, Kumudini (Kumi) AU - Jackson, Melissa AU - Agnew, Charles AU - Beal, Cara D. AU - Barnes, Samuel K. AU - Soeters, Simone AU - Mukheibir, Pierre AU - Brown, Suzanne AU - Moggridge, Bradley T2 - Australasian Journal of Water Resources AB - Safe drinking water and effective sanitation is a basic human right. The health of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples living on traditional Country in remote Australia can be supported or undermined by these essential services. Despite global and Australian commitments to the Sustainable Development Goals, water and sanitation service levels have regularly been identified as unreliable, unsafe, and of a lower standard than non-Indigenous and non-remote settlements. This research sought to identify the optimal conditions to enable consistent delivery of safe water and sanitation in remote Indigenous communities of Australia. Using a combination of literature reviews, interviews with key stakeholder groups and applied research findings, key conditions for improved water and sanitation outcomes were identified. These included technology for water and sanitation that is fit for purpose, people and place; capacity-building, training and ongoing support for local Indigenous service operators; and that all personnel involved in delivery require a level of cultural competency to the local and Indigenous context. These findings are intended to contribute to informing more sustainable water and sanitation outcomes in Indigenous communities. DA - 2022/07/03/ PY - 2022 DO - 10.1080/13241583.2022.2083052 DP - Taylor and Francis+NEJM VL - 26 IS - 2 SP - 187 EP - 198 SN - 1324-1583 ST - Safe water and sanitation in remote Indigenous communities in Australia UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/13241583.2022.2083052 Y2 - 2022/12/12/01:54:56 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - The Planets in Indigenous Australian Traditions AU - Hamacher, Duane W. AU - Banks, Kirsten T2 - arXiv preprint arXiv:1806.02462 DA - 2018/// PY - 2018 DP - Google Scholar LA - D10: Wiradjuri, wrh Wiradjuri ER - TY - JOUR TI - Elements of power: Material-political entanglements in Australia's fossil fuel hegemony AU - Hamilton, Olivia AU - Nyberg, Daniel AU - Bowden, Vanessa T2 - Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space AB - Anthropocentric climate change presents an existential threat through impacts such as rising sea levels, effects on agricultural crops and extreme weather events. However, governments, businesses and communities struggle to wean off fossil fuel dependency. In this article, we argue that this is due to the grip of fossil fuel hegemony. To explain this grip, we draw on the theoretical perspectives of new materialism to examine how fossil fuels and politics interact in upholding Australia's fossil fuel regime. Our analysis, based on 70 qualitative interviews conducted with politicians and political advisors, fossil fuel executives and experts and environmental activists, shows three processes – establishment, entrenchment and encroachment – through which political-material entanglements lock in a fossil fuel-based future. These processes are both discursive, with politicians and industry downplaying, if not outright denying, the climate emergency and material, with investment in new mines and infrastructure even while the negative ecological impacts of fossil fuel use gather pace. DA - 2023/02/27/ PY - 2023 DO - 10.1177/25148486231159305 DP - journals.sagepub.com (Atypon) SP - 25148486231159305 SN - 2514-8486 ST - Elements of power UR - https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/25148486231159305 Y2 - 2023/05/09/00:04:46 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - CHAP TI - Collective living-legacies of Aunty Gladys Elphick and the Council for Aboriginal Women in South Australia AU - Harkin, N. T2 - Reframing Indigenous Biography DA - 2024/// PY - 2024 SP - 282 EP - 300 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85209849884&doi=10.4324%2f9781003351863-22&partnerID=40&md5=52707c431fab5a4346fde41b874d3d12 DB - Scopus ER - TY - JOUR TI - Mapping Australian Postcolonial Landscapes: From Resistance to Reconciliation AU - Harris, Mark T2 - Law Text Culture DA - 2003/// PY - 2003 VL - 7 SP - 71 J2 - Law Text Culture ST - Mapping Australian Postcolonial Landscapes UR - https://heinonline.org/HOL/Page?handle=hein.journals/lwtexcu7&id=75&div=&collection= KW - Landscape architecture KW - Urban and cultural heritage ER - TY - JOUR TI - Management of urban waterways in Melbourne, Australia: 1. current status AU - Hart, Barry T AU - Francey, Matt AU - Chesterfield, Chris T2 - Australasian Journal of Water Resources AB - Urban waterways (rivers, wetlands and estuaries) are highly valued assets in cities throughout the world, and for this reason there is now increased global interest in the effective management of these assets. This paper uses a review of the historical evolution of urban waterway management in the city of greater Melbourne (Australia) over the past 50 years to draw out the major practice changes and lessons learned that we believe will be relevant to other cities. Further, we have used this information to develop a conceptual framework for urban waterway management consisting of three broad components: enabler actions (policy/management strategies; links to catchments; links to urban planning); outcomes (enhanced environmental values; community values; indigenous cultural values); and knowledge to assess progress with the strategy implementation and potential area for modification (adaptive management). In a companion paper we consider future challenges, due to climate change, population growth and increased urbanisation, and the need to more closely link urban waterway management and green city planning (Hart et al., in preparation). DA - 2021/07/03/ PY - 2021 DO - 10.1080/13241583.2021.1954281 DP - Taylor and Francis+NEJM VL - 25 IS - 2 SP - 183 EP - 201 SN - 1324-1583 ST - Management of urban waterways in Melbourne, Australia UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/13241583.2021.1954281 Y2 - 2023/05/09/01:28:29 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - Management of urban waterways in Melbourne, Australia: 2 – integration and future directions AU - Hart, Barry T AU - Francey, Matt AU - Chesterfield, Chris AU - Blackham, Dom AU - McCarthy, Neil T2 - Australasian Journal of Water Resources AB - This paper continues the analysis of the management of urban waterways in Greater Melbourne, Australia, commenced with our first paper. We focus first on the increasing emphasis on waterways and their corridors as part of Melbourne’s liveability, and then on the future management of waterways and their corridors in the face of the three most pressing future challenges – climate change, population increase, and urban expansion and densification. The long history of the development of parks, gardens and open spaces in Melbourne is reviewed. These open-spaces initially occurred with quite strong linkage to the waterways, enabled by the city’s unique institutional arrangements, but were substantially weakened as a result of policy and governance reforms in the 1990s. Melbourne will need to substantially improve the integration of the management of urban waterways and their corridors with the planning, development and management of the city’s associated green spaces if it is to achieve the expected community liveability standards in the face of the above three future challenges. Additionally, if waterway management remains with the existing agency (Melbourne Water), the authorising environment and the culture and mindset of this agency will need to change its focus from the current ‘city servicing’ institutional model to a ‘city shaping’ model. DA - 2022/07/26/ PY - 2022 DO - 10.1080/13241583.2022.2103896 DP - Taylor and Francis+NEJM VL - 0 IS - 0 SP - 1 EP - 22 SN - 1324-1583 ST - Management of urban waterways in Melbourne, Australia UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/13241583.2022.2103896 Y2 - 2023/05/09/01:28:25 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - Benchmarking Indigenous water holdings in the Murray-Darling Basin: a crucial step towards developing water rights targets for Australia AU - Hartwig, Lana D AU - Markham, Francis AU - Jackson, Sue T2 - Australasian Journal of Water Resources AB - Australia’s ability to address Indigenous claims for water rights and to advance both national Indigenous and water policy is hampered by a lack of information on Indigenous water entitlements and the communities that hold them. This paper contributes to the policy agenda of increasing Indigenous water rights by developing a method that quantifies and enables spatially explicit comparison of Indigenous-held water within and across Murray-Darling Basin jurisdictions. We construct baselines for (i) Indigenous population (ii) Indigenous holdings of surface water entitlements, and (iii) Indigenous holdings of groundwater entitlements across water management units in the Basin. We estimate that Indigenous surface water holdings constitute no more than 0.17% of the equivalent permitted take across the entire Basin. Groundwater entitlements held by Indigenous entities constitute 0.02% of all available groundwater. The approximate market value of these water entitlements is A\19.2 million in 2015–16 terms, which equates to 0.12% of the total \16.5 billion market value. In contrast, 5.3% of the Murray-Darling Basin population is Indigenous, a proportion that is rapidly increasing. The production of estimates of this type, and Indigenous control of the data needed to generate them, are first steps in a reparations process that can contribute towards Indigenous water justice. DA - 2021/07/03/ PY - 2021 DO - 10.1080/13241583.2021.1970094 DP - Taylor and Francis+NEJM VL - 25 IS - 2 SP - 98 EP - 110 SN - 1324-1583 ST - Benchmarking Indigenous water holdings in the Murray-Darling Basin UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/13241583.2021.1970094 Y2 - 2023/05/09/01:27:18 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - Water colonialism and Indigenous water justice in south-eastern Australia AU - Hartwig, Lana D. AU - Jackson, Sue AU - Markham, Francis AU - Osborne, Natalie T2 - International Journal of Water Resources Development DA - 2021/// PY - 2021 DO - https://doi.org/10.1080/07900627.2020.1868980 VL - 38 IS - 1 SP - 30 EP - 63 UR - https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/07900627.2020.1868980 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - Why do some disadvantaged Australian families become homeless? Resources, disadvantage, housing and welfare AU - Hastings, Catherine T2 - Housing Studies AB - Homeless families include children whose experiences of homelessness and extreme poverty can have long-term negative impacts over the life course. This paper proposes a resource-orientated causal explanation of the mechanisms of family homelessness in Australia. Given the critical role of poverty in housing insecurity, the model explains why some families living in extreme poverty and disadvantage become homeless and others do not. The research is positioned within a critical realist approach to theoretical causal explanation. It is influenced by interdisciplinary literature and psychologist Hobfoll’s Conservation of Resources theory. Previously published empirical analysis informs and supports the development of this theoretical model. Families use their resources to mitigate challenges to their housing security. However, disadvantage limits their accumulation of resources, contributes to accelerating resource loss, and constrains their capacity to act. An acute lack of affordable housing and insufficient welfare payments to secure private rental accommodation severely impacts a family’s capacity to navigate crises and avoid homelessness. DA - 2023/04/02/ PY - 2023 DO - 10.1080/02673037.2023.2194248 DP - Taylor and Francis+NEJM VL - 0 IS - 0 SP - 1 EP - 25 SN - 0267-3037 ST - Why do some disadvantaged Australian families become homeless? UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2023.2194248 Y2 - 2023/05/09/01:15:57 KW - Architecture KW - Property ER - TY - JOUR TI - Learning to build relationships for a better Australia: Indigenous reconciliation in action in the construction and resource sectors AU - Heard, Isaac AU - Love, Peter ED AU - Sing, Michael CP AU - Goerke, Veronica T2 - Construction Innovation DA - 2017/// PY - 2017 DO - https://doi.org/10.1108/CI-06-2015-0032 VL - 17 IS - 1 SP - 4 EP - 24 J2 - Construction Innovation SN - 1471-4175 UR - https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/CI-06-2015-0032/full/html KW - Construction ER - TY - BOOK TI - The Land is a Map: Placenames of Indigenous Origin in Australia AU - Hercus, Luise AU - Hodges, Flavia AU - Simpson, Jane AB - The entire Australian continent was once covered with networks of Indigenous placenames. These names often evoke important information about features of the environment and their place in Indigenous systems of knowledge. On the other hand, placenames assigned by European settlers and officials are largely arbitrary, except for occasional descriptive labels such as 'river, lake, mountain'. They typically commemorate people, or unrelated places in the Northern hemisphere. In areas where Indigenous societies remain relatively intact, thousands of Indigenous placenames are used, but have no official recognition. Little is known about principles of forming and bestowing Indigenous placenames. Still less is known about any variation in principles of placename bestowal found in different Indigenous groups. While many Indigenous placenames have been taken into the official placename system, they are often given to different features from those to which they originally applied. In the process, they have been cut off from any understanding of their original meanings. Attempts are now being made to ensure that additions of Indigenous placenames to the system of official placenames more accurately reflect the traditions they come from. The eighteen chapters in this book range across all of these issues. The contributors (linguistics, historians and anthropologists) bring a wide range of different experiences, both academic and practical, to their contributions. The book promises to be a standard reference work on Indigenous placenames in Australia for many years to come. DA - 2009/// PY - 2009 DP - JSTOR PB - ANU Press SN - 978-1-921536-56-4 ST - The Land is a Map UR - https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt24hfdz Y2 - 2022/12/12/02:21:59 KW - Architecture KW - Urban and cultural heritage KW - Urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - Indigenous Australian heritage on private land: an examination of guidance provided by local government authorities of NSW AU - Hobbs, Daniel T AU - Spennemann, Dirk HR T2 - Australian Planner DA - 2020/// PY - 2020 DO - https://doi.org/10.1080/07293682.2020.1854797 VL - 56 IS - 4 SP - 249 EP - 260 J2 - Australian Planner SN - 0729-3682 UR - https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/07293682.2020.1854797 KW - Architecture KW - Heritage KW - Indigenous Australian heritage KW - Urban planning KW - heritage planning KW - local government policy KW - public information ER - TY - JOUR TI - Urban re-generations: afterword to special issue on the politics of urban greening in Australian cities AU - Houston, Donna T2 - Australian Geographer DA - 2020/// PY - 2020 DO - https://doi.org/10.1080/00049182.2020.1783743 VL - 51 IS - 2 SP - 257 EP - 263 J2 - Australian Geographer SN - 0004-9182 UR - https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00049182.2020.1783743 KW - Landscape architecture KW - Urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - Planning in the shadow of extinction: Carnaby’s Black cockatoos and urban development in Perth, Australia AU - Houston, Donna T2 - Contemporary Social Science DA - 2021/// PY - 2021 DO - https://doi.org/10.1080/21582041.2019.1660909 VL - 16 IS - 1 SP - 43 EP - 56 J2 - Contemporary Social Science SN - 2158-2041 UR - https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/21582041.2019.1660909 KW - Landscape architecture KW - Urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - Drinking water security: the neglected dimension of Australian water reform AU - Howey, Kirsty AU - Grealy, Liam T2 - Australasian Journal of Water Resources AB - Drinking water security has been a neglected issue in Australian water reform. This article considers Australia’s chief water policy of the past two decades, the National Water Initiative, and its aim to provide healthy, safe, and reliable water supplies. Taking the Northern Territory as a case study, we describe how despite significant policy and research attention, the NWI has failed to ensure drinking water security in Indigenous communities in the NT, where water supply remains largely unregulated. The article describes shortcomings of legislated drinking water protections, the recent history of Commonwealth water policy, and areas where national reforms have not been satisfactorily undertaken in the NT. We aim to highlight key regulatory areas that require greater attention in NT water research and, more specifically, in the Productivity Commission’s ongoing inquiry process. DA - 2021/07/03/ PY - 2021 DO - 10.1080/13241583.2021.1917098 DP - Taylor and Francis+NEJM VL - 25 IS - 2 SP - 111 EP - 120 SN - 1324-1583 ST - Drinking water security UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/13241583.2021.1917098 Y2 - 2023/05/09/01:28:27 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - CHAP TI - Case Study: The Destruction of Australian Aboriginal Heritage and Its Implications for Indigenous Peoples Globally AU - Huntley, J. AU - Wallis, L.A. T2 - The Routledge Handbook of Heritage Destruction DA - 2023/// PY - 2023 SP - 384 EP - 394 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85165982800&doi=10.4324%2f9781003131069-34&partnerID=40&md5=0dd58779d615ca1c635211c1ae8c4f25 DB - Scopus KW - Urban and cultural heritage ER - TY - ELEC TI - Australia's Strategy for Nature 2019-2030 AU - Interjurisdictional Biodiversity Working Group T2 - Australia's Nature Hub DA - 2019/07/01/ PY - 2019 UR - https://www.australiasnaturehub.gov.au/national-strategy Y2 - 2020/08/31/00:00:00 KW - Landscape architecture ER - TY - BOOK TI - Planning in Indigenous Australia AU - Jackson, Sue AU - Porter, Libby AU - Johnson, Louise C. DA - 2017/// PY - 2017 DP - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b6449721~S30 PB - Routledge UR - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b6449721~S30 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - The politics of evaporation and the making of atmospheric territory in Australia’s Murray-Darling Basin AU - Jackson, Sue AU - Head, Lesley T2 - Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space AB - Scholarship on the hydrosocial cycle has tended to overlook the atmospheric phase of the cycle. This paper identifies and conceptualises a politics of evaporation in Australia’s Murray-Darling Basin. Evaporation is not a neutral hydrological concept to be understood, measured or acted on without an appreciation of the networks in which it originates, the geo-political circumstances that continue to shape its circulation, and its socio-spatial effects. The politics of evaporation is conceptualised here as a process of hydrosocial territorialisation in which atmospheric water came to be known as a force acting within a balanced hydrologic cycle, and ‘atmospheric territory’ was created. The scientific origins of evaporation show (i) how modernist hydrologic technologies and conventions that relied on containment and territorialisation to account for and control water led to the negative depiction of evaporation as a loss, and (ii) the historical depth of processes of abstraction and commensuration that are so influential in today’s regimes of water accounting and marketisation. The politics of evaporation is identified empirically in the controversy surrounding the management of the Menindee Lakes and the lower Darling River in New South Wales, where efforts to ‘save’ water according to the logic of efficiency have enrolled atmospheric water into a Basin-wide program to redistribute surface water. The lens of evaporation theorises a neglected aspect of the materiality of water that is particularly important to the dry, hot parts of the world. It challenges us to rethink the ‘cycle’ as well as the ‘hydro’, while providing further evidence of the value of thinking about territory in a material register as volumetric and not areal. DA - 2022/09// PY - 2022 DO - 10.1177/25148486211038392 DP - journals.sagepub.com (Atypon) VL - 5 IS - 3 SP - 1273 EP - 1295 SN - 2514-8486 UR - https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/25148486211038392 Y2 - 2023/05/09/00:04:48 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - BOOK TI - The Story of Australia: A New History of People and Place AU - Johnson, L.C. AU - Luckins, T. AU - Walker, D. T2 - The Story of Australia: A New History of People and Place DA - 2021/// PY - 2021 SP - 1 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85131152685&doi=10.4324%2f9781003185970&partnerID=40&md5=80debd954508fc9b1e5483a4efa4c58d DB - Scopus ER - TY - JOUR TI - Reframing and revising Australia’s planning history and practice AU - Johnson, Louise AU - Porter, Libby AU - Jackson, Sue T2 - Australian Planner DA - 2017/// PY - 2017 DO - https://doi.org/10.1080/07293682.2018.1477813 VL - 54 IS - 4 SP - 225 EP - 233 J2 - Australian Planner SN - 0729-3682 UR - https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/07293682.2018.1477813 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - CHAP TI - Reclaiming a place: Post-colonial appropriations of the colonial at Budj Bim, Western Victoria, Australia AU - Johnson, Louise C T2 - Indigenous Places and Colonial Spaces A2 - Gombay, Nicole A2 - Palomino-Schalscha, Marcela DA - 2018/// PY - 2018 DP - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au/record=b7336736~S30 SP - 91 EP - 107 PB - Routledge SN - 1-315-47253-8 UR - https://www.taylorfrancis.com/chapters/edit/10.4324/9781315472539-5/reclaiming-place-louise-johnson?context=ubx&refId=e8fa0c10-0929-4eed-abc5-c467dd42bbd7 KW - Architecture KW - Landscape architecture ER - TY - THES TI - Making Civic Space: A Comparative Study of Civic Space Design in the Contemporary Settler Societies of Australia and New Zealand AU - Johnson, Fiona Claire DA - 2019/// PY - 2019 M3 - PhD Thesis PB - University of Melbourne ST - Making Civic Space UR - http://hdl.handle.net/11343/238551 KW - Architecture ER - TY - CHAP TI - Introduction: Surveying the Australian Landscape AU - Jones, D.S. AU - Alder, K. AU - Bhatnagar, S. AU - Cooke, C. AU - Dearnaley, J. AU - Diaz, M. AU - Iida, H. AU - Nair, A.M. AU - McMahon, S.-L. AU - Nicholson, M. AU - Pocock, G. AU - Powell, U.B. AU - Powell, G. AU - Rahurkar, S.G. AU - Ryan, S. AU - Sharma, N. AU - Su, Y. AU - Wagh, S.V. AU - Yapa Appuhamillage, O.L. T2 - Learning Country in Landscape Architecture: Indigenous Knowledge Systems, Respect and Appreciation DA - 2021/// PY - 2021 SP - 1 EP - 9 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85150582209&doi=10.1007%2f978-981-15-8876-1_1&partnerID=40&md5=7fd0b2f2b11ac21acea7b412be8aa9d9 DB - Scopus KW - Landscape architecture ER - TY - BOOK TI - Exploring Place in the Australian Landscape: In the Country of the White Cockatoo AU - Jones, D.S. T2 - Exploring Place in the Australian Landscape: In the Country of the White Cockatoo DA - 2022/// PY - 2022 SP - 1 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85151750618&doi=10.1007%2f978-981-19-3213-7&partnerID=40&md5=f2a87e2c07305d1062e8b310de263e4a DB - Scopus KW - Australian landscapes KW - Indigenous Australians KW - Indigenous Knowledge Systems KW - Landscape Design KW - cultural heritage ER - TY - JOUR TI - Kapi Wiya: Water insecurity and aqua-nullius in remote inland Aboriginal Australia: AU - Judd, Barry T2 - Thesis Eleven AB - Water has been a critical resource for Anangu peoples across the remote inland for millennia, underpinning their ability to live in low rainfall environments. A... DA - 2019/01/14/ PY - 2019 DO - 10.1177/0725513618821969 DP - journals.sagepub.com LA - C6: Pitjantjatjara ST - Kapi Wiya UR - https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0725513618821969 AN - Sage UK: London, England Y2 - 2020/11/03/05:55:31 ER - TY - JOUR TI - Sea Country: Plurality and knowledge of saltwater territories in Indigenous Australian contexts AU - Kearney, A. AU - O'Leary, M. AU - Platten, S. T2 - Geographical Journal DA - 2023/// PY - 2023 DO - 10.1111/geoj.12466 VL - 189 IS - 1 SP - 104 EP - 116 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85133569947&doi=10.1111%2fgeoj.12466&partnerID=40&md5=5b535f45807a6add9104baabe3d74314 DB - Scopus KW - Indigenous and local knowledge KW - landscape ER - TY - JOUR TI - Urban development and long-term flood risk and resilience: Experiences over time and across cultures. Cases from Asia, North America, Europe and Australia AU - Keenan-Jones, D.C. T2 - Urban Studies DA - 2023/// PY - 2023 DO - 10.1177/00420980231212077 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85179922145&doi=10.1177%2f00420980231212077&partnerID=40&md5=7b56a1b2b7df07d62e616e18607b0dd2 DB - Scopus KW - disaster management KW - urban planning ER - TY - CHAP TI - Developing a community of practice: museums and reconciliation in Australia AU - Kelly, Lynda AU - Gordon, Phil T2 - Museums, society, inequality DA - 2003/// PY - 2003 DP - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b3517570~S30 SP - 173 EP - 194 PB - Routledge ST - Developing a community of practice UR - https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/unimelb/reader.action?docID=171037&ppg=9 KW - Urban and cultural heritage ER - TY - CHAP TI - Community-Oriented Protected Areas for Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities: Indigenous Protected Areas in Australia AU - Langton, Marcia AU - Palmer, Lisa AU - Ma Rhea, Zane T2 - Indigenous Peoples, National Parks, and Protected Areas: A New Paradigm Linking Conservation, Culture, and Rights CY - Tucson, UNITED STATES DA - 2014/// PY - 2014 DP - ProQuest Ebook Central SP - 84 EP - 107 LA - E31 Yiman; PB - University of Arizona Press SN - 978-0-8165-9860-1 UR - http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/unimelb/detail.action?docID=3411888 Y2 - 2020/11/04/00:02:10 KW - Indigenous peoples ER - TY - BOOK TI - Welcome to Country: A Travel Guide to Indigenous Australia AU - Langton, Marcia AB - Tourism Australia statistics show that many overseas tourists, as well as Australians, are keen to learn more about Australia&rsquo;s first peoples. And while the Indigenous tourism industry continues to grow, no comprehensive travel guide is currently available. Welcome to Country is a curated guidebook to Indigenous Australia and the Torres Strait Islands. Author Professor Marcia Langton offers fascinating insights into Indigenous languages and customs, history, native title, art and dance, storytelling, and cultural awareness and etiquette for visitors. There is also a directory of Indigenous tourism experiences, organised by state or territory, covering galleries and festivals, national parks and museums, communities that are open to visitors, as well as tours and performances.<br /><br />This book is essential for anyone travelling around Australia who wants to learn more about the culture that has thrived here for over 50,000 years. It also offers the chance to enjoy tourism opportunities that will show you a different side of this fascinating country &mdash; one that remains dynamic, and is filled with openness and diversity.</p> DA - 2018/05/01/ PY - 2018 SP - 555 LA - en PB - Hardie Grant Publishing SN - 978-1-74358-526-9 ST - Marcia Langton ER - TY - JOUR TI - Built Environments and Cardiometabolic Morbidity and Mortality in Remote Indigenous Communities in the Northern Territory, Australia AU - Le Gal, Camille AU - Dale, Michael J AU - Cargo, Margaret AU - Daniel, Mark T2 - International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health DA - 2020/// PY - 2020 DO - https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17030769 VL - 17 IS - 3 SP - 769 UR - https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/17/3/769 KW - Architecture KW - Urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - Sustainable Indigenous housing in regional and remote Australia AU - Lea, T. AU - Grealy, L. AU - Moskos, M. AU - Brambilla, A. AU - King, S. AU - Habibis, D. AU - Benedict, R. AU - Phibbs, P. AU - Sun, C. AU - Torzillo, P. T2 - AHURI Final Report DA - 2021/// PY - 2021 DO - 10.18408/AHURI7323701 IS - 368 SP - 1 EP - 107 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85123061457&doi=10.18408%2fAHURI7323701&partnerID=40&md5=1e7a4e5cd3d567ea2dd46104f9b626ee DB - Scopus KW - Climate change KW - Indigenous housing KW - Property ER - TY - JOUR TI - The social procurement practices of tier-one construction contractors in Australia AU - Loosemore, M AU - Reid, S T2 - Construction management and economics DA - 2019/// PY - 2019 DO - https://doi.org/10.1080/01446193.2018.1505048 VL - 37 IS - 4 SP - 183 EP - 200 J2 - Construction management and economics SN - 0144-6193 UR - https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/01446193.2018.1505048 KW - Construction ER - TY - CONF TI - Barriers to indigenous enterprise in the Australian construction industry AU - Loosemore, Martin AU - Denny-Smith, George T2 - Vol. 2 of Proc., 32nd Annual ARCOM Conf., edited by PW Chan and CJ Neilson DA - 2016/// PY - 2016 SP - 629 EP - 638 UR - https://www.arcom.ac.uk/-docs/proceedings/478b6e1487122c6a01fca21e18464930.pdf KW - Construction ER - TY - JOUR TI - The drivers of social procurement policy adoption in the construction industry: an Australian perspective AU - Loosemore, Martin AU - Keast, Robyn AU - Alkilani, Suhair T2 - Building Research & Information AB - The construction industry is the primary focus for social procurement policies in many countries. However, there has been little research into the drivers of social procurement policy adoption in this industry. To help address this gap in research, this paper reports the results of semi-structured interviews with fifteen social procurement professionals who are implementing social procurement into the Australian construction industry. Results reveal interesting historical parallels with the implementation of environmental sustainability initiatives. However, social procurement has yet to become normalized. There appears to be a high level of homogeneity in industry practice and while there is considerable scope for innovation, this is constrained by the prescriptive and ‘top-down' nature of social procurement policies in Australia which make it difficult for organizations to respond ‘bottom-up’ to actual community needs. It is concluded that the considerable untapped potential of social procurement policies to create social value currently depends on the intrapreneurial efforts of a small number of emerging social procurement professionals who are individually challenging the many institutional norms and practices which undermine the implementation of these policies into the construction industry. DA - 2023/03/10/ PY - 2023 DO - 10.1080/09613218.2023.2180344 DP - Taylor and Francis+NEJM VL - 0 IS - 0 SP - 1 EP - 13 SN - 0961-3218 ST - The drivers of social procurement policy adoption in the construction industry UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/09613218.2023.2180344 Y2 - 2023/05/09/00:57:19 KW - Construction KW - Urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - Aboriginal Food Practices and Australian Native Plant-Based Foods: A Step toward Sustainable Food Systems AU - Lopes, C.V.A. AU - Mihrshahi, S. AU - Ronto, R. AU - Hunter, J. T2 - Sustainability (Switzerland) DA - 2023/// PY - 2023 DO - 10.3390/su151511569 VL - 15 IS - 15 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85167901780&doi=10.3390%2fsu151511569&partnerID=40&md5=f3f94036307003abe8b17a125f0f8333 DB - Scopus KW - Indigenous food systems KW - Indigenous knowledge KW - sustainability ER - TY - JOUR TI - Fostering Landscape Identity Through Participatory Design With Indigenous Cultures of Australia and Aotearoa/New Zealand AU - Marques, B. AU - Grabasch, G. AU - McIntosh, J. T2 - Space and Culture DA - 2021/// PY - 2021 DO - 10.1177/1206331218783939 VL - 24 IS - 1 SP - 37 EP - 52 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85049630076&doi=10.1177%2f1206331218783939&partnerID=40&md5=deac0015d7817b9777fb25ad70617005 DB - Scopus KW - Maori KW - indigenous culture KW - landscape architecture ER - TY - BOOK TI - Alternative interventions: Aboriginal homelands, outback Australia and the Centre for Appropriate Technology AU - Mayne, Alan AB - Not all interventions in Aboriginal Australia are inspired by external agents, politics or ideology. Some arise from simple, pragmatic responses to community needs where people and their aspirations are central. Historian Alan Mayne unravels a story of people, place and relationships. At once both personal and intensely political, this is a journey of ideas into action; intervention through innovation CN - 338.927 CY - Kent Town, South Australia DA - 2014/// PY - 2014 DP - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b5395849~S30 SP - 172 PB - Wakefield Press SN - 978-1-74305-272-3 ST - Alternative interventions UR - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b5395849~S30 KW - Architecture KW - Indigenous peoples ER - TY - JOUR TI - Policies, politics, and paradigms: Healthy planning in Australian local government AU - McCosker, Anthony AU - Matan, Anne AU - Marinova, Dora T2 - Sustainability DA - 2018/// PY - 2018 DO - https://doi.org/10.3390/su10041008 VL - 10 IS - 4 SP - 1008 J2 - Sustainability UR - https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/4/1008 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - BOOK TI - Assembling the Centre: Architecture for Indigenous Cultures: Australia and Beyond AU - McGaw, Janet AU - Pieris, Anoma AB - Metropolitan Indigenous Cultural Centres have become a focal point for making Indigenous histories and contemporary cultures public in settler-colonial societies over the past three decades. While there are extraordinary success stories, there are equally stories that cause concern: award-winning architecturally designed Indigenous cultural centres that have been abandoned; centres that serve the interests of tourists but fail to nourish the cultural interests of Indigenous stakeholders; and places for vibrant community gathering that fail to garner the economic and politic support to remain viable. Indigenous cultural centres are rarely static. They are places of ‘emergence’, assembled and re-assembled along a range of vectors that usually lie beyond the gaze of architecture. How might the traditional concerns of architecture – site, space, form, function, materialities, tectonics – be reconfigured to express the complex and varied social identities of contemporary Indigenous peoples in colonised nations? This book, documents a range of Indigenous Cultural Centres across the globe and the processes that led to their development. It explores the possibilities for the social and political project of the Cultural Centre that architecture both inhibits and affords. Whose idea of architecture counts when designing Indigenous Cultural Centres? How does architectural history and contemporary practice territorialise spaces of Indigenous occupation? What is architecture for Indigenous cultures and how is it recognised? This ambitious and provocative study pursues a new architecture for colonised Indigenous cultures that takes the politics of recognition to its heart. It advocates an ethics of mutual engagement as a crucial condition for architectural projects that design across cultural difference. The book’s structure, method, and arguments are dialogically assembled around narratives told by Indigenous people of their pursuit of public recognition, spatial justice, and architectural presence in settler dominated societies. Possibilities for decolonising architecture emerge through these accounts. DA - 2014/11/13/ PY - 2014 DP - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b5948221~S2 SP - 251 LA - en PB - Routledge SN - 978-1-317-59894-7 ST - Assembling the Centre UR - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b5948221~S2 KW - Architecture ER - TY - BOOK TI - Assembling the centre: architecture for indigenous cultures: Australia and beyond AU - McGaw, Janet AU - Pieris, Anoma T2 - Routledge research in architecture CN - NA6811 .M38 2015 CY - Abingdon, Oxon ; New York DA - 2015/// PY - 2015 DP - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b5948221~S30 SP - 209 PB - Routledge SN - 978-0-415-81532-1 ST - Assembling the centre UR - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b5948221~S30 KW - Architecture ER - TY - JOUR TI - Cross-Cultural Monitoring of a Cultural Keystone Species Informs Revival of Indigenous Burning of Country in South-Eastern Australia AU - McKemey, Michelle B. AU - Patterson, Maureen (Lesley) AU - Banbai Rangers AU - Ens, Emilie J. AU - Reid, Nick C. H. AU - Hunter, John T. AU - Costello, Oliver AU - Ridges, Malcolm AU - Miller, Cara T2 - Human Ecology AB - Globally, Indigenous cultural burning has been practiced for millennia, although colonization limited Indigenous people’s ability to access and manage their ancestral lands. Recently, recognition of Indigenous fire management has been increasing, leading to the re-emergence of cultural burning in Australia, the Americas, parts of Asia and Africa. We describe how the Banbai people of south-eastern Australia have reintroduced cultural burning at Wattleridge Indigenous Protected Area. Our team of Banbai Rangers and non-Indigenous scientists conducted cross-cultural research to investigate the impact of burning on a cultural keystone species, the Short-beaked echidna (Tachyglossus aculeatus). Our comparison of the effects of a low-intensity, patchy, cultural fire in the Wattleridge Indigenous Protected Area to a nearby higher intensity fire in Warra National Park through a Before-After-Control-Impact assessment indicated that the higher intensity fire reduced echidna foraging activity, possibly to avoid predation. Most importantly, we describe a cross-cultural research model whereby Indigenous rangers and non-Indigenous scientists work together to inform adaptive natural and cultural resource management. Such trans-disciplinary and collaborative research strengthens informed conservation decision-making and the social-ecological resilience of communities. DA - 2019/12/01/ PY - 2019 DO - 10.1007/s10745-019-00120-9 DP - Springer Link VL - 47 IS - 6 SP - 893 EP - 904 J2 - Hum Ecol LA - Banbai, E8: Baanbay SN - 1572-9915 UR - https://doi.org/10.1007/s10745-019-00120-9 Y2 - 2020/10/30/05:53:05 ER - TY - BOOK TI - From hunting to drinking: the devastating effects of alcohol on an Australian Aboriginal community AU - McKnight, David CN - GN667.Q4 M35 2002 CY - London ; New York DA - 2002/// PY - 2002 DP - cat.lib.unimelb.edu.au Library Catalog SP - 239 PB - Routledge ST - From hunting to drinking ER - TY - BOOK TI - The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Indigenous Australia and New Guinea AU - McNiven, I.J. AU - David, B. T2 - The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Indigenous Australia and New Guinea DA - 2021/// PY - 2021 SP - 1 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85196247542&doi=10.1093%2foxfordhb%2f9780190095611.001.0001&partnerID=40&md5=00a0b313419a00f38781dd9585011718 DB - Scopus ER - TY - CONF TI - Shifting Australian Indigenous settlements AU - Memmott, Paul T2 - IASTE Conference AB - The University of Queensland's institutional repository, UQ eSpace, aims to create global visibility and accessibility of UQ’s scholarly research. C3 - Traditional Dwellings and Settlements Review DA - 2016/01/01/ PY - 2016 VL - 28 SP - 39 EP - 39 LA - eng PB - International Association for the Study of Traditional Environments UR - https://www.jstor.org/stable/44211390 KW - Architecture ER - TY - BOOK TI - Gunyah, Goondie + Wurley: The Aboriginal Architecture of Australia AU - Memmott, Paul AB - Debunking the inaccurate popular notions of early Aboriginal architecture and settlement, this lavish volume explores the range and complexity of Aboriginal-designed structures, spaces, and territories, from minimalist shelters to permanent houses and villages. As a framework for ongoing debate and research on Aboriginal lifestyles and cultural heritage, the book additionally features a brief overview of post-1970 collaborative architecture between white Australian architects and Aboriginal clients, as well as an introduction to the work of the first Aboriginal graduates of university-based courses in architecture. DA - 2007/// PY - 2007 DP - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b3140413~S2 SP - 450 LA - en PB - Univ. of Queensland Press SN - 978-0-7022-3245-9 ST - Gunyah, Goondie + Wurley UR - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b3140413~S2 KW - Architecture KW - Indigenous knowledge ER - TY - JOUR TI - Housing Design for Health in a Changing Climate for Remote Indigenous Communities in Semi-Arid Australia AU - Memmott, P. AU - Lansbury, N. AU - Nash, D. AU - Snow, S. AU - Redmond, A.M. AU - Burgen, C. AU - Matthew, P. AU - Quilty, S. AU - Frank, P.N. T2 - Architecture DA - 2024/// PY - 2024 DO - 10.3390/architecture4030041 VL - 4 IS - 3 SP - 778 EP - 801 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85205234211&doi=10.3390%2farchitecture4030041&partnerID=40&md5=81843dc9e6772caf2917c83bbbdb7b38 DB - Scopus KW - Architecture ER - TY - BOOK TI - Take 2: housing design in Indigenous Australia AU - Memmott, Paul AU - Go Sam, Carroll A3 - Chambers, Catherine DA - 2003/// PY - 2003 DP - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b2854211~S30 PB - Royal Australian Institute of Architects ST - Take 2 UR - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b2854211~S30 KW - Architecture ER - TY - BOOK TI - Indigenous Settlements of Australia AU - Memmott, Paul AU - Moran, Mark T2 - State of the environment Australia technical papers. Series 2 CN - 306.0899915 CY - Canberra DA - 2001/// PY - 2001 PB - Dept. of the Environment and Heritage UR - https://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:9202 Y2 - 2021/10/04/23:21:27 KW - Architecture KW - Landscape architecture KW - Urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - Indigenous research methodologies in water management: learning from Australia and New Zealand for application on Kamilaroi country AU - Moggridge, Bradley J. AU - Thompson, Ross M. AU - Radoll, Peter T2 - Wetlands Ecology and Management AB - Indigenous Research Methodologies (IRMs) for considering cultural values of water are a missing component of water and wetlands management in Australia. On this dry, flat and ancient continent Traditional Knowledge has been passed on from generation to generation for millennia. The profound knowledge of surface and groundwater has been critical to ensuring the survival of Indigenous peoples in the driest inhabited continent, through finding, re-finding and protecting water. Indigenous Research Methodologies can provide a basis for the exploration of this knowledge in a way that that is culturally appropriate, and which generates a culturally safe space for Indigenous researchers and communities. The development of IRMs has been and continues to be limited in Australia in the water context, primarily due to the lack of Indigenous water practitioners, with non-Indigenous researchers dominating the sector. The intention of the paper is to shift and decolonise the research paradigm from studying Indigenous peoples through non-Indigenous research methodologies, to partnering in developing methods appropriate to Indigenous knowledge systems. Indigenous Research Methodologies are rooted in Indigenous epistemologies and ontologies and represent a radical departure from more positivist forms of research (Wilson, Can J Native Educ 25:2, 2001). This allows the Indigenous researcher to derive the terms, questions, and priorities of what is being researched, how the community is engaged, and how the research is delivered. This paper provides an overview of Indigenous engagement in water management in Australia and Aotearoa (New Zealand), with reference to case studies. These more general models are used as the basis for developing an IRM appropriate to the Kamilaroi people in the Gwydir Wetlands of northern NSW, Australia. DA - 2022/08// PY - 2022 DO - 10.1007/s11273-022-09866-4 VL - 30 IS - 4 SP - 853 EP - 868 LA - English SN - 0923-4861 UR - https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/indigenous-research-methodologies-water/docview/2703671079/se-2?accountid=12372 AN - 2703671079 DB - ProQuest Central KW - Aotearoa KW - Australia KW - Cultural values KW - Environmental Studies KW - Epistemology KW - Groundwater KW - Indigenous KW - Indigenous Peoples' knowledge KW - Indigenous knowledge KW - Indigenous peoples KW - Indigenous research methodologies KW - Kamilaroi KW - Knowledge representation KW - Māori KW - Native peoples KW - New Zealand KW - Research KW - Research methodology KW - Research methods KW - Survival KW - Traditional knowledge KW - Water KW - Water management KW - Water resource management KW - Wetland KW - Wetland management KW - Wetlands ER - TY - JOUR TI - Cultural value of water and western water management: an Australian indigenous perspective AU - Moggridge, Bradley J. AU - Thompson, Ross M. T2 - Australasian Journal of Water Resources DA - 2021/// PY - 2021 DO - https://doi.org/10.1080/13241583.2021.1897926 DP - Google Scholar VL - 25 IS - 1 SP - 4 EP - 14 ST - Cultural value of water and western water management UR - https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13241583.2021.1897926 KW - Landscape architecture KW - Urban planning ER - TY - ELEC TI - The Uluru Statement from the Heart: Australia's Greatest Moral Challenge AU - Morris, Shireen AB - The Uluru Statement from the Heart offers a way to resolve the fundamental moral problem that has troubled this nation since the British ships arrived: how do we create a fairer relationship with the First Nations of this land? DA - 2018/03// PY - 2018 LA - en_AU ST - The Uluru Statement from the Heart UR - https://www.abc.net.au/religion/the-uluru-statement-from-the-heart-australias-greatest-moral-cha/10094924 Y2 - 2021/06/24/00:00:00 KW - Indigenous peoples ER - TY - JOUR TI - Aboriginal Sovereignty and the Politics of Reconciliation: The Constituent Power of the Aboriginal Embassy in Australia AU - Muldoon, Paul AU - Schaap, Andrew T2 - Environment and Planning D: Society and Space AB - As a reoccupation of land immediately in front of Parliament House for six months in 1972, the Aboriginal Embassy was an inspiring demonstration of Aboriginal self-determination and land rights. Since 1972 demonstrators have maintained an Embassy on the site as part of the continuing Aboriginal struggle. Significantly, on its twentieth anniversary in 1992 Embassy protestors declared Aboriginal sovereignty just as the state-initiated formal reconciliation process was getting underway in Australia. Within mainstream public discourse in Australia, reconciliation is understood as aligned with a progressive politics. In this paper we examine the reactionary politics of reconciliation vis-à-vis the struggle for land rights and sovereignty that the Embassy embodies. To this end we examine a debate within legal theory about the relation between ‘constituted power’ (state sovereignty) and ‘constituent power’ (democratic praxis). Following Antonio Negri, the Embassy can be understood as one manifestation of the constituent power of Aboriginal people (and their non-Aboriginal supporters) that the Australian state appropriates to shore up its own defective claim to sovereignty. We illustrate this by comparing the symbolism of the Aboriginal Embassy with that of Reconciliation Place in Canberra. We complicate this analysis by discussing how the Embassy strategically exploits the ambiguous status of Aboriginal people as citizens within and without the community presupposed by the Australian state. In doing so the Embassy makes present the possibility of a break with the colonial past that is often invoked in the politics of reconciliation but which the Australian state has failed to enact. DA - 2012/06// PY - 2012 DO - 10.1068/d24310 DP - DOI.org (Crossref) VL - 30 IS - 3 SP - 534 EP - 550 J2 - Environ Plan D LA - en SN - 0263-7758, 1472-3433 ST - Aboriginal Sovereignty and the Politics of Reconciliation UR - http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1068/d24310 KW - Urban and cultural heritage KW - Urban planning ER - TY - CHAP TI - Indigenous Courthouse and Courtroom Design in Australia: Case Studies, Design Paradigms, and the Issue of Cultural Agency1 AU - Murphy, J.R. AU - Grant, E. AU - Anthony, T. T2 - Courthouse Architecture, Design and Social Justice DA - 2021/// PY - 2021 SP - 75 EP - 106 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85141609032&doi=10.4324%2f9780429059858-7&partnerID=40&md5=80f040e614180c2815321bb9cf6f0778 DB - Scopus KW - architecture ER - TY - BOOK TI - Songlines: tracking the Seven Sisters AU - Neale, Margo AU - Neale, Margo AB - This stunning companion to the National Museum of Australia's blockbuster Indigenous-led exhibition, Songlines: Tracking the Seven Sisters, explores the history and meaning of songlines, the Dreaming or creationtracks that crisscross the Australian continent, of which the Seven Sisters songline is one of the most extensive. Through stunning artworks (many created especially for theexhibition), story, and in-depth analysis, the book will provide the definitive resource for those interested in finding out more about these complex pathways of spiritual,ecological, economic, cultural, and ontological knowledge - the stories 'written in the land' CN - DU124.R3 S63 2017 CY - Canberra, ACT DA - 2017/// PY - 2017 DP - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b6581183~S2 ET - 1st edition SP - 255 PB - National Museum of Australia Press SN - 978-1-921953-29-3 ST - Songlines UR - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b6581183~S2 KW - Indigenous knowledge KW - Indigenous peoples ER - TY - JOUR TI - Reconciling Policy Tensions on the Frontlines of Indigenous Housing Provision in Australia: Reflexivity, Resistance and Hybridity AU - Nethercote, Megan T2 - Housing Studies AB - In Australia, significant recent reforms reposition Indigenous housing provision and management in remote and town camp communities under the mainstream public housing model. Two competing discourses surround this shift: a federal discourse of standardisation and state discourses of local responsiveness centred on the introduction of new community engagement processes into Indigenous public housing. This paper reports on qualitative research into the micro-scale of policy implementation to highlight policy-to-practice translation on the frontlines of Indigenous housing. Based on interviews with Indigenous housing stakeholders, this paper argues the capacity to support locally responsive housing management is problematic under the current arrangements. The analytical framework of realist governmentality reveals frontline housing professionals' role in the local resolution of tensions between federal and state policy levers. A focus on agent reflexivity and resistance on the frontline assists in capturing the dynamic (hybrid) identity of Indigenous public housing, as an atypical Australian example of hybridity in social housing. DA - 2014/11/17/ PY - 2014 DO - 10.1080/02673037.2014.925098 DP - Taylor and Francis+NEJM VL - 29 IS - 8 SP - 1045 EP - 1072 SN - 0267-3037 ST - Reconciling Policy Tensions on the Frontlines of Indigenous Housing Provision in Australia UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2014.925098 Y2 - 2023/05/09/01:13:29 KW - Architecture KW - Property ER - TY - JOUR TI - Sea level rise drowned a vast habitable area of north-western Australia driving long-term cultural change AU - Norman, K. AU - Bradshaw, C.J.A. AU - Saltré, F. AU - Clarkson, C. AU - Cohen, T.J. AU - Hiscock, P. AU - Jones, T. AU - Boesl, F. T2 - Quaternary Science Reviews DA - 2024/// PY - 2024 DO - 10.1016/j.quascirev.2023.108418 VL - 324 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85180013055&doi=10.1016%2fj.quascirev.2023.108418&partnerID=40&md5=74d8afd318f3a02ac14148edd36368fc DB - Scopus ER - TY - THES TI - Reclaiming Darug history: revealing the truths about settlement on Darug Ngurra through the lens of an Australian Aboriginal historical research methodology AU - Norman-Hill, Rosemary DA - 2020/// PY - 2020 M3 - Doctor of Indigenous Philosophy PB - Southern Cross University UR - ttps://doi.org/10.25918/thesis.70 KW - Land rights KW - Landscape architecture KW - Urban and cultural heritage ER - TY - JOUR TI - Adapting ecosystem accounting to meet the needs of Indigenous living cultural landscapes: A case study from Yawuru Country, northern Australia AU - Normyle, A. AU - Doran, B. AU - Mathews, D. AU - Melbourne, J. AU - Vardon, M. T2 - Global Environmental Change DA - 2024/// PY - 2024 DO - 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2024.102876 VL - 87 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85198135932&doi=10.1016%2fj.gloenvcha.2024.102876&partnerID=40&md5=f8ee03b77c956f01e7482a7159136ab1 DB - Scopus ER - TY - BOOK TI - Emu dreaming: an introduction to Australian Aboriginal astronomy AU - Norris, Ray P. AU - Norris, Cilla CY - Sydney DA - 2009/// PY - 2009 DP - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b8521434~S2 SP - 30 PB - Emu Dreaming SN - 978-0-9806570-0-5 ST - Emu dreaming UR - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b8521434~S2 KW - Indigenous astronomy KW - Indigenous knowledge ER - TY - GEN TI - North Australian Aboriginal Justice Agency, “Northern Territory Housing Issues Paper and Response to the Housing Strategy Consultation Draft,” February 2011. AU - North Australian Aboriginal Justice Agency (NAAJA) DA - 2016/// PY - 2016 PB - Social Services Legislation Amendment (Housing Affordability) Bill 2017 Submission 32 - Attachment 1 UR - https://www.aph.gov.au/DocumentStore.ashx?id=2fd7cf4e-9df6-4e86-8aa5-d8a7d3f2a06a&subId=561956 Y2 - 2022/06/29/00:10:27 KW - Architecture KW - Housing ER - TY - JOUR TI - Racialized water governance: the ‘hydrological frontier’ in the Northern Territory, Australia AU - O’Donnell, Erin AU - Jackson, Sue AU - Langton, Marcia AU - Godden, Lee T2 - Australasian Journal of Water Resources AB - Increased scrutiny and contestation over recent water allocation practices and licencing decisions in the Northern Territory (NT) have exposed numerous inadequacies in its regulatory framework. Benchmarking against the National Water Initiative shows that NT lags behind national standards for water management. We describe key weaknesses in NT’s water law and policy, particularly for Indigenous rights and interests. NT is experiencing an acceleration of development, and is conceptualised as a ‘hydrological frontier’, where water governance has institutionalised regulatory spaces of inclusion and exclusion that entrench and (re)produce inequities and insecurities in water access. Regulations demarcate spaces in which laws and licencing practices provide certainty and security of rights for some water users, with opportunities to benefit from water development and services, while leaving much of NT (areas predominantly owned and occupied by Indigenous peoples) outside these legal protections. Water allocation and planning, as well as water service provision, continue to reinforce and reproduce racialised access to (and denial of) water rights. Combining an analysis of the law and policies that apply to water for economic development with those designed to regulate domestic water supply, we present a comprehensive and current picture of water insecurity for Indigenous peoples across the NT. DA - 2022/01/02/ PY - 2022 DO - 10.1080/13241583.2022.2049053 DP - Taylor and Francis+NEJM VL - 26 IS - 1 SP - 59 EP - 71 SN - 1324-1583 ST - Racialized water governance UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/13241583.2022.2049053 Y2 - 2023/05/09/01:27:25 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - CONF TI - Prototyping spinifex grass as thermal insulation in arid regions of Australia AU - O’Rourke, Tim AU - Flutter, Nick AU - Memmott, Paul C3 - Proceedings of the 44th Annual Conference of the Australian and New Zealand Architectural Science Association. Auckland: ANZASCA DA - 2010/// PY - 2010 UR - https://archscience.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/ANZAScA_2010_ORourke_T_Flutter_N_and_Mermmott_P.pdf KW - Landscape architecture ER - TY - CHAP TI - Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Domestic Architecture in Australia AU - O’Rourke, Timothy T2 - The handbook of contemporary Indigenous architecture DA - 2018/// PY - 2018 DP - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b6649655~S2 SP - 25 EP - 56 PB - Springer UR - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b6649655~S2 KW - Architecture ER - TY - JOUR TI - Renewable energy development on the Indigenous Estate: Free, prior and informed consent and best practice in agreement-making in Australia AU - O'Neill, L. AU - Thorburn, K. AU - Riley, B. AU - Maynard, G. AU - Shirlow, E. AU - Hunt, J. T2 - Energy Research and Social Science DA - 2021/// PY - 2021 DO - 10.1016/j.erss.2021.102252 VL - 81 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85113656639&doi=10.1016%2fj.erss.2021.102252&partnerID=40&md5=104fb076eb6e088a1a16535a59d9cde4 DB - Scopus KW - Indigenous land ownership KW - Renewable energy ER - TY - JOUR TI - Aboriginal yards in remote Australia: Adapting landscapes for indigenous housing AU - O'Rourke, Timothy AU - Nash, Daphne T2 - Landscape and Urban Planning DA - 2019/// PY - 2019 DO - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.landurbplan.2018.10.013 VL - 182 SP - 124 EP - 132 J2 - Landscape and Urban Planning SN - 0169-2046 UR - https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0169204618301993 KW - Landscape architecture KW - Urban planning ER - TY - CHAP TI - Gunyah, Goondie + Wurley: The Aboriginal Architecture of Australia AU - Page, Alison Joy T2 - The Oxford Companion to Aboriginal Art and Culture A2 - Kleinert, Sylvia A2 - Neale, Margo AB - The Companion is divided into two separate, but interconnected parts; part one is structured broadly on a chronological framework, offering a multi-perspective view of the diversity of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander art and culture; part two, the reference section extends the interpretative essays in part one, but also can be used as encyclopaedic entries; interpretative essays annotated individually. DA - 2000/// PY - 2000 DP - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b2607160~S30 SP - 423 EP - 426 LA - en PB - Oxford University Press SN - 978-0-19-550649-5 UR - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b2607160~S30 KW - Architecture ER - TY - ELEC TI - Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park AU - Parks Australia T2 - Tjukurpa UR - https://parksaustralia.gov.au/uluru/discover/culture/tjukurpa/ KW - Landscape architecture ER - TY - BOOK TI - Dark Emu: Aboriginal Australia and the Birth of Agriculture AU - Pascoe, Bruce AB - 'Dark Emu injects a profound authenticity into the conversation about how we Australians understand our continent ... [It is] essential reading for anyone who wants to understand what Australia once was, or what it might yet be if we heed the lessons of long and sophisticated human occupation.' Judges for 2016 NSW Premier's Literary Awards Dark Emu puts forward an argument for a reconsideration of the hunter-gatherer tag for pre-colonial Aboriginal Australians. The evidence insists that Aboriginal people right across the continent were using domesticated plants, sowing, harvesting, irrigating, and storing -- behaviours inconsistent with the hunter-gatherer tag. Gerritsen and Gammage in their latest books support this premise but Pascoe takes this further and challenges the hunter-gatherer tag as a convenient lie. Almost all the evidence in Dark Emu comes from the records and diaries of the Australian explorers, impeccable sources. Bruce's comments on his book compared to Gammage's: " My book is about food production, housing construction and clothing, whereas Gammage was interested in the appearance of the country at contact. [Gammage] doesn't contest hunter gatherer labels either, whereas that is at the centre of my argument." DA - 2018/06// PY - 2018 SP - 278 LA - en PB - Magabala Books SN - 978-1-921248-01-6 ST - Dark Emu UR - https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/unimelb/detail.action?docID=5581055 KW - Indigenous knowledge ER - TY - JOUR TI - ‘Strange changes’: Indigenous perspectives of climate change and adaptation in NE Arnhem Land (Australia) AU - Petheram, L. AU - Zander, K.K. AU - Campbell, B.M. AU - High, C. AU - Stacey, N. T2 - Global Environmental Change DA - 2010/10// PY - 2010 DO - 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2010.05.002 DP - DOI.org (Crossref) VL - 20 IS - 4 SP - 681 EP - 692 J2 - Global Environmental Change LA - en SN - 09593780 ST - ‘Strange changes’ UR - https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0959378010000427 Y2 - 2021/06/24/06:54:31 KW - Landscape architecture KW - Urban planning ER - TY - BOOK TI - Indigenous Place: Contemporary Buildings, Landmarks and Places of Significance in South East Australia and Beyond AU - Pieris, Anoma AU - Tootell, Naomi AU - McGaw, Janet AU - Berg, Rueben AB - Explores contemporary Indigenous place making; draws on examples of Indigenous cultural spaces from Australian metropolitan centres including Melbourne, Sydney, Perth, Canberra, Adelaide, Brisbane and Darwin, remote and regional areas; asks what makes a culturally appropriate representation of Aboriginality; surveyed cultural sites and facilities -- artworks, landscape and civic projects, purpose-built Aboriginal cultural centres and museums, commemorative sites, and political sites; discusses political struggles, decolonising ideas and community empowerment; joint project between University of Melbourne, Deakin University, the City of Melbourne Indigenous Arts Program, Reconciliation Victoria and The Victorian Traditional Owners Land Justice Group; launched as part of the 2014 Melbourne Indigenous Arts Festival. DA - 2014/// PY - 2014 DP - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b5346697~S2 SP - 284 LA - en PB - Melbourne School of Design, Faculty of Architecture Building and Planning, The University of Melbourne SN - 978-0-7340-4902-5 ST - Indigenous Place UR - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b5346697~S2 KW - Architecture KW - Landscape architecture KW - Urban design KW - Urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - Caring for Country: History and Alchemy in the Making and Management of Indigenous Australian Land: Caring for Country AU - Pleshet, Noah T2 - Oceania DA - 2018/07// PY - 2018 DO - 10.1002/ocea.5188 DP - DOI.org (Crossref) VL - 88 IS - 2 SP - 183 EP - 201 J2 - Oceania LA - en SN - 00298077 ST - Caring for Country UR - http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/ocea.5188 Y2 - 2021/06/24/06:50:04 KW - Landscape architecture ER - TY - JOUR TI - From an urban country to urban Country: confronting the cult of denial in Australian cities AU - Porter, Libby T2 - Australian Geographer DA - 2018/// PY - 2018 DO - https://doi.org/10.1080/00049182.2018.1456301 VL - 49 IS - 2 SP - 239 EP - 246 J2 - Australian Geographer SN - 0004-9182 UR - https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00049182.2018.1456301 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - Indigenous people and the miserable failure of Australian planning AU - Porter, Libby T2 - Planning Practice & Research DA - 2017/// PY - 2017 DO - https://doi.org/10.1080/02697459.2017.1286885 VL - 32 IS - 5 SP - 556 EP - 570 J2 - Planning Practice & Research SN - 0269-7459 UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/02697459.2017.1286885 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - What are the impacts of living in social housing? New evidence from Australia AU - Prentice, David AU - Scutella, Rosanna T2 - Housing Studies AB - In this paper, we apply statistical matching methods to a national longitudinal dataset of Australians facing housing insecurity to estimate the impacts of social housing on employment, education, health, incarceration and homelessness. We find social housing in Australia provides an important `safety net’ protecting people from homelessness. However, at least in the short run, individuals in social housing have similar outcomes in terms of employment, education, physical and mental health, and incarceration to other comparable individuals not in social housing. These are the first estimates of causal impacts of social housing, simultaneously estimating impacts on a range of shelter and non-shelter outcomes highlighted as important by the broader social housing literature. They also provide an interesting contrast with the existing US estimates. These results are potentially due to strict targeting of individuals into social housing and that they represent the average effect across individuals who may experience substantially different impacts. DA - 2020/04/20/ PY - 2020 DO - 10.1080/02673037.2019.1621995 DP - Taylor and Francis+NEJM VL - 35 IS - 4 SP - 612 EP - 647 SN - 0267-3037 ST - What are the impacts of living in social housing? UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2019.1621995 Y2 - 2023/05/09/01:15:50 KW - Architecture KW - Property ER - TY - JOUR TI - Vacuums and veils: Engaging with statistically ‘invisible’Indigenous population dynamics in Yamatji Country, Western Australia AU - Prout, Sarah T2 - Geographical Research DA - 2009/// PY - 2009 DO - https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1745-5871.2009.00584.x VL - 47 IS - 4 SP - 408 EP - 421 ST - Vacuums and veils UR - https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/j.1745-5871.2009.00584.x?sid=vendor%3Adatabase KW - Landscape architecture KW - Urban planning ER - TY - THES TI - Problematising the wickedness of 'disadvantage' in Australian Indigenous affairs policy AU - Pyle, Elizabeth Ann DA - 2018/// PY - 2018 M3 - MBA PB - Queensland University of Technology UR - https://eprints.qut.edu.au/122956/1/Elizabeth_Pyle_Thesis.pdf ER - TY - JOUR TI - Factors to be considered in the design of indigenous communities' houses, with a focus on Australian first nation housing in the Northern Territory AU - Rajabipour, A. AU - Kutay, C. AU - Guenther, J. AU - Bazli, M. T2 - Development Engineering DA - 2023/// PY - 2023 DO - 10.1016/j.deveng.2023.100109 VL - 8 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85152409967&doi=10.1016%2fj.deveng.2023.100109&partnerID=40&md5=a41c7915843ffd5658bca6ad4e29e204 DB - Scopus KW - Architecture KW - Urban design ER - TY - JOUR TI - Welcome to Country: Geographical valuations and devaluations of First Nations’ presence on Country in Australia AU - Randell-Moon, Holly T2 - Environment and Planning F AB - First Nations’ custodianship of Country has provided incalculable benefits to Australia. Geographical devaluation of this custodianship has been central to settler colonial and later governmental economic and development policy that worked/s to remove First Nations from Country. Indeed, the negation of First Nations sovereignties to extract value from the environment for non-Indigenous dividends underpins the development and operation of state-directed economic activity in Australia. As a result, how First Nations are valued, or not, is tied to cultural, political and economic ideas about First Nations’ presence on Country. Welcome to Country ceremonies exemplify the complexities associated with geographical valuations of First Nations’ presence. Such ceremonies incentivise labour demands for Elder and older First Nations to enact language and culturally specific custodianship even as broader non-Indigenous institutions are hostile to self-determined development and Indigenous sovereignties. The article provides a theoretical account of the geographical valuations and modelling tendencies with respect to First Nations economic development that focus on the state as the key interlocutor. Where scholarship draws attention to the role of the state as recognising the cultural rather than economic dimension of First Nations activities, Welcome to Country ceremonies demonstrate the importance of regional and local scales of First Nations sovereign practices. First Nations and Elder capacities to perform these ceremonies are both a normalised and under-considered element of regional development activities. Welcome to Country constitutes an important case site for understanding the complex interactions between First Nations axiologies and non-Indigenous geographical valuations. DA - 2023/04/22/ PY - 2023 DO - 10.1177/26349825231163150 DP - journals.sagepub.com (Atypon) SP - 26349825231163150 SN - 2634-9825 ST - Welcome to Country UR - https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/26349825231163150 Y2 - 2023/05/09/00:08:28 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - BOOK TI - Belonging: Australians, place and Aboriginal ownership AU - Read, Peter DA - 2000/// PY - 2000 DP - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b2583015~S30 PB - Cambridge University Press ST - Belonging UR - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b2583015~S30 KW - Land rights ER - TY - BOOK TI - Tangled destinies: National Museum of Australia A3 - Reed, Dimity CN - NA6700.C36 T36 2002 CY - Mulgrave, Vic DA - 2002/// PY - 2002 DP - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b2713871~S30 SP - 180 PB - Images Publishing Group SN - 978-1-876907-39-6 ST - Tangled destinies UR - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b2713871~S30 KW - Architecture ER - TY - CHAP TI - Enough is Enough: Indigenous Knowledge Systems, Living Heritage and the (Re) Shaping of Built Environment Design Education in Australia AU - Revell, G AU - Heyes, S AU - Jones, D AU - Choy, D L AU - Tucker, R AU - Bird, S T2 - The Handbook of Contemporary Indigenous Architecture A2 - Grant, E A2 - Greenop, K A2 - Refiti, A L A2 - Glenn, D J CY - Singapore DA - 2018/// PY - 2018 SP - 465 EP - 493 PB - Springer Nature KW - Architecture KW - Indigenous knowledge KW - Urban and cultural heritage KW - Urban design ER - TY - JOUR TI - Living Waters, Law First: Nyikina and Mangala water governance in the Kimberley, Western Australia AU - RiverOfLife, Martuwarra AU - Taylor, Katherine S AU - Poelina, Anne T2 - Australasian Journal of Water Resources AB - The ‘Living Waters, Law First’ water governance framework centres Living Waters, First Law and the health/well-being of people and Country. The framework is based on a groundwater policy position developed by the Walalakoo Aboriginal Corporation (WAC), the Nyikina and Mangala peoples’ native title corporation, in the West Kimberley, Western Australia in 2018. This article celebrates Traditional Owner’s pragmatic decolonising strategies. It explores the emerging conceptual challenges to the status quo by comparing the Living Waters, First Law framework to Australia’s settler state water governance framework, represented by the National Water Initiative. Bacchi’s ‘what is the problem represented to be’ approach is used to interrogate the underlying assumptions and logics (2009). We find that there are incommensurable differences with First Law and the Australian water reform agenda. Yet, our analysis also suggests ‘bridges’ in relation to sustainability, benefits and responsibilities could promote dialogues towards decolonial water futures. DA - 2021/01/02/ PY - 2021 DO - 10.1080/13241583.2021.1880538 DP - Taylor and Francis+NEJM VL - 25 IS - 1 SP - 40 EP - 56 SN - 1324-1583 ST - Living Waters, Law First UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/13241583.2021.1880538 Y2 - 2023/05/09/01:27:17 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - Dormitories: Single men's housing in remote Indigenous Australia AU - Robertson, Hannah T2 - Architecture Australia DA - 2020/// PY - 2020 VL - 109 IS - 5 SP - 26 EP - 28 ST - Dormitories UR - https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&AuthType=sso&db=vth&AN=145333839&site=ehost-live&custid=s2775460 KW - Architecture ER - TY - NEWS TI - Building in ways that meet the needs of Australia’s remote regions AU - Robertson, Hannah T2 - The Conversation AB - Centralised policies are not meeting the needs of remote Indigenous settlements. Increasing their decision-making input and the role of local industry can overcome the challenges of building remotely. DA - 2018/12/20/ PY - 2018 LA - en UR - http://theconversation.com/building-in-ways-that-meet-the-needs-of-australias-remote-regions-106071 Y2 - 2021/10/04/23:03:32 KW - Architecture KW - Construction ER - TY - JOUR TI - Journeys through an Australian sacred landscape AU - Robinson, Cathy AU - Baker, Richard AU - Liddle, Lynette T2 - Museum International DA - 2003/// PY - 2003 DO - https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1350-0775.2003.00429.x VL - 55 IS - 2 SP - 74 EP - 77 J2 - Museum International SN - 1350-0775 UR - tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1046/j.1350-0775.2003.00429.x KW - Landscape architecture KW - Urban and cultural heritage ER - TY - BOOK TI - Nourishing Terrains; Australian Aboriginal views of Landscape and Wilderness AU - Rose, Deborah Bird CY - Canberra DA - 1996/// PY - 1996 DP - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b2198466~S30 PB - Australian Heritage Commission UR - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b2198466~S30 KW - Landscape architecture ER - TY - CHAP TI - Australasian Cities: Urban Change Across Australia and New Zealand AU - Ruming, Kristian AU - Baker, Tom T2 - Companion to Urban and Regional Studies A2 - Orum, Anthony A2 - Ruiz-Tagle, Javier A2 - Haddock, Serena Vicari DA - 2021/// PY - 2021 SP - 85 EP - 108 PB - Wiley UR - https://doi.org/10.1002/9781119316916.ch5 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - Planning Reform During COVID-19: Stakeholder Perspectives on Reform Initiatives in New South Wales and Western Australia AU - Ruming, Kristian AU - Mouat, Clare M. AU - Morel-EdnieBrown, Felicity T2 - Urban Policy and Research AB - The COVID-19 outbreak in Australia led to a period of economic crisis. In response, Commonwealth and State Governments targeted the construction sector for concentrated economic stimulation. Planning systems, and their reform, were identified as levers to stimulate economic activity. This paper explores early COVID-19-initiated planning system reforms in New South Wales and Western Australia. It explores key reforms in each state and provides a comparative analysis of reform objectives, the influence of key stakeholders, reform innovations and possibilities for future reform. COVID-19-induced reforms emerge as both the continuation of the long-term reform agenda and reactionary interventions to immediate economic challenges. DA - 2023/01/02/ PY - 2023 DO - 10.1080/08111146.2022.2137141 DP - Taylor and Francis+NEJM VL - 41 IS - 1 SP - 98 EP - 116 SN - 0811-1146 ST - Planning Reform During COVID-19 UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/08111146.2022.2137141 Y2 - 2023/05/09/01:17:55 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - Is Homeownership the Answer? Housing Tenure and Indigenous Australians in Remote (and Settled) Areas AU - Sanders, Will T2 - Housing Studies AB - This paper examines the relevance of recently floated policy ideas for extending homeownership to remote Aboriginal Australians. It argues that while the housing tenure system in more densely settled Australia is dominated by homeownership, this is not, and cannot realistically be expected to be, the case in remote areas. The paper uses data from the 2001 Census, organized by remoteness geography, to demonstrate the different character of the housing tenure system in remote Australia. The paper argues that homeownership in remote Aboriginal communities is a somewhat unrealistic policy goal, given the underlying income and employment status of Indigenous people in these communities. The paper also argues that there are better measures of Indigenous housing need and disadvantage in Australia than low homeownership rates. It briefly reports on one past failed experiment in Queensland to introduce homeownership to a remote Aboriginal community. DA - 2008/05/01/ PY - 2008 DO - 10.1080/02673030802030014 DP - Taylor and Francis+NEJM VL - 23 IS - 3 SP - 443 EP - 460 SN - 0267-3037 ST - Is Homeownership the Answer? UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/02673030802030014 Y2 - 2023/05/09/01:13:19 KW - Architecture KW - Property ER - TY - JOUR TI - Applying landscape-level principles to koala management in Australia: a comparative analysis AU - Schlagloth, Rolf AU - A. Morgan, Edward AU - Cadman, Timothy AU - Santamaria, Flavia AU - McGinnis, Gabrielle AU - Thomson, Hedley AU - Kerlin, Douglas H. AU - Maraseni, Tek Narayan AU - Cahir, Fred AU - D. Clark, Ian AU - Clode, Danielle AU - Mcewan, Alexandra T2 - Journal of Environmental Planning and Management AB - We provide a comparative analysis of two koala management plans for populations in two Australian municipalities, based on principles of landscape management: Ballarat (Victoria) and Bellingen (New South Wales). A landscape-based approach is required to protect the species, but evaluation of landscape management is limited. We present an assessment framework for evaluating local koala management plans. The plans are evaluated against a common set of principles and criteria, despite very different approaches stemming from context-specific factors. Interestingly, despite a variation in the number of indicators in the plans, the overall results of the evaluation demonstrate a similar level of performance against the criteria, and common strengths and weaknesses. In the absence of consistent standards for the protection of the koala across Australia, the species will continue to decline, and management practices will fail to protect the koala from extinction, as is currently predicted. DA - 2022/10/04/ PY - 2022 DO - 10.1080/09640568.2022.2124154 DP - Taylor and Francis+NEJM VL - 0 IS - 0 SP - 1 EP - 22 SN - 0964-0568 ST - Applying landscape-level principles to koala management in Australia UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/09640568.2022.2124154 Y2 - 2023/05/09/01:07:38 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - Applying an Australian native title framework to Bedouin property AU - Sheehan, John AU - Amara, Ahmad AU - Abu-Saad, Ismael AU - Yiftachel, Oren T2 - Indigenous (In) Justice: Human Rights Law and Bedouin Arabs in the Naqab/Negev DA - 2012/// PY - 2012 VL - 4 SP - 229 UR - https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Ismael-Abu-Saad/publication/263065463_Indigenous_InJustice_Human_Rights_Law_and_Bedouin_Arabs_in_the_NaqabNegev_Cambridge_MA_Harvard_University_Press/links/5767c31c08ae421c448dc394/Indigenous-InJustice-Human-Rights-Law-and-Bedouin-Arabs-in-the-Naqab-Negev-Cambridge-MA-Harvard-University-Press.pdf#page=243 ER - TY - JOUR TI - Ethics and consent in more-than-human research: Some considerations from/with/as Gumbaynggirr Country, Australia AU - Smith, A.S. AU - Marshall, U.B. AU - Smith, N. AU - Wright, S. AU - Daley, L. AU - Hodge, P. AU - Yandaarra with Gumbaynggirr Country including T2 - Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers AB - A considerable body of recent work within the social sciences has attempted to engage more deeply with place, place-based knowledge, and more-than-human agency. Yet what this might look like in relation to ethical research practice, especially in the case of research proceeding on unceded Indigenous lands, is unclear. Taking more-than-human agency seriously means ethical research practice must be extended beyond a human-centric approach. As a Gumbaynggirr and non-Gumbaynggirr research collective researching on, with, and as Gumbaynggirr Country in so-called Australia, we offer a contribution to discussions of research ethics and protocols that centres the consent of Country: the lands, waters, and skies of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander homelands, and the human and more-than-human beings that co-become there. In this paper, we share some of our learnings and discuss how we have tried not just to listen to Country but also to honour its agencies, knowledges, and sovereignties. As part of this honouring, we prioritise in particular the deeply placed Gumbaynggirr knowledges of Aunty Shaa Smith and Uncle Bud Marshall to explore what being guided by Gumbaynggirr Law/Lore and sovereignty means in practice and the challenges and possibilities of gaining consent of Country in ways underpinned by Indigenous Law/Lore. We propose a more expansive understanding of consent that includes attention to more-than-human sovereignties and draw on our collective's learning to reframe the need for limits on research as openings rather than closures. In sharing our Gumbaynggirr-led and Country-led perspectives, we aim to deepen decolonising research praxis within human geography and the social sciences more broadly. The information, practices and views in this article are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the Royal Geographical Society (with IBG). © 2021 Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers). DA - 2022/// PY - 2022 DO - 10.1111/tran.12520 VL - 47 IS - 3 SP - 709 EP - 724 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85122812376&doi=10.1111%2ftran.12520&partnerID=40&md5=1a5bf6427f88484c188d1b6c9f3a1793 DB - Scopus KW - Aboriginal Law/Lore and sovereignty KW - consent of Country ER - TY - JOUR TI - Persuasion without policies: The work of reviving Indigenous peoples’ fire management in southern Australia AU - Smith, W. AU - Neale, T. AU - Weir, J.K. T2 - Geoforum DA - 2021/// PY - 2021 DO - 10.1016/j.geoforum.2021.01.015 VL - 120 SP - 82 EP - 92 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85100380037&doi=10.1016%2fj.geoforum.2021.01.015&partnerID=40&md5=9aea11ab592d2ba70b70dbdfccb77a0b DB - Scopus KW - Indigenous peoples KW - urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - The semblance of populism: National Museum of Australia AU - Stead, Naomi T2 - The Journal of Architecture DA - 2004/09/01/ PY - 2004 DO - 10.1080/13602360412331296170 VL - 9 IS - 3 SP - 385 EP - 396 SN - 1360-2365 ST - The semblance of populism UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/13602360412331296170 KW - Architecture ER - TY - JOUR TI - Carbon profiles of remote Australian Indigenous communities: A base for opportunities AU - Stewart, J AU - Anda, M AU - Harper, RJ T2 - Energy Policy DA - 2016/// PY - 2016 DO - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.enpol.2016.03.036 VL - 94 SP - 77 EP - 88 J2 - Energy Policy SN - 0301-4215 UR - https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0301421516301409 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - CHAP TI - Integrating Indigenous Lifestyle in Net-Zero Energy Buildings. A Case Study of Energy Retrofitting of a Heritage Building in the Southwest of Western Australia AU - Strazzeri, V. AU - Tiwari, R. T2 - Urban Sustainability DA - 2023/// PY - 2023 VL - Part F3685 SP - 407 EP - 432 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85210565820&doi=10.1007%2f978-981-99-2695-4_24&partnerID=40&md5=69b4a2ea183c0727b1d270c5c28c21af DB - Scopus KW - Architecture KW - Heritage ER - TY - CHAP TI - When the City Calls: Mapping Indigenous Australian Queer Placemaking in Sydney AU - Sullivan, C.T. T2 - Mapping LGBTQ Spaces and Places: A Changing World DA - 2022/// PY - 2022 SP - 293 EP - 303 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85161920431&doi=10.1007%2f978-3-031-03792-4_18&partnerID=40&md5=210aed2617788ff635d4dd2f59bb1015 DB - Scopus ER - TY - BOOK TI - The Politics Of Suffering: Indigenous Australia and The End of the Liberal Consensus AU - Sutton, Peter CN - GN666 .S897 2011 CY - Melbourne DA - 2009/// PY - 2009 DP - cat.lib.unimelb.edu.au Library Catalog ET - 2nd ed SP - 1 PB - Melbourne University Publishing SN - 978-0-522-85935-5 ST - The Politics Of Suffering ER - TY - BOOK TI - Black power in Australia : Bobbi Sykes versus Senator Neville T. Bonner - Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (AIATSIS) AU - Sykes, Roberta B. A3 - Turner, Ann A3 - Bonner, Neville AB - Debates on how to obtain first-class citizenship for blacks; two main definitions of black power; Aboriginal situation regarding housing, social welfare, land rights; statistics on Aboriginal populations CY - South Yarra, Vic DA - 1975/// PY - 1975 DP - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b1020154~S30 LA - en PB - Heinnemann Educational Australia ST - Black power in Australia UR - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b1020154~S30 Y2 - 2021/08/20/01:59:09 KW - Indigenous peoples ER - TY - JOUR TI - Enablers and challenges when engaging local communities for urban biodiversity conservation in Australian cities AU - Taylor, L. AU - Maller, C.J. AU - Soanes, K. AU - Ramalho, C.E. AU - Aiyer, A. AU - Parris, K.M. AU - Threlfall, C.G. T2 - Sustainability Science DA - 2022/// PY - 2022 DO - 10.1007/s11625-021-01012-y VL - 17 IS - 3 SP - 779 EP - 792 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85112508208&doi=10.1007%2fs11625-021-01012-y&partnerID=40&md5=d0ddebfd7770463fdadf8ab43c3482a7 DB - Scopus KW - landscape KW - urban planning ER - TY - THES TI - Self-Centering Aboriginalities: An Examination of Three Aboriginal Cultural Centers in Southeastern Australia AU - Thorner, Sabra G. DA - 2003/// PY - 2003 DP - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b2833124~S30 M3 - PhD Thesis PB - University of Melbourne, Faculty of Arts ST - Self-Centering Aboriginalities UR - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b2833124~S30 KW - Architecture KW - Urban and cultural heritage ER - TY - MAP TI - Map showing the distribution of the Aboriginal tribes of Australia [cartographic material] AU - Tindale, Norman C1 - 1:6,336,000 CY - Adelaide DA - 1940/// PY - 1940 LA - en PB - Govt. Photolithographer UR - https://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-230054338 Y2 - 2021/08/20/06:19:41 KW - Architecture KW - Landscape architecture KW - Urban and cultural heritage ER - TY - THES TI - Aboriginal Cultural Heritage on Farmlands: The Perceptions of Farmers of the Tatiara District of South Australia AU - Toone, Gary Robert CY - CAnberra DA - 2016/// PY - 2016 M3 - PhD Thesis PB - Australian National University UR - https://openresearch-repository.anu.edu.au/bitstream/1885/127456/1/Toone%20Thesis%202017.pdf KW - Urban and cultural heritage ER - TY - JOUR TI - ‘Doing culture’ in contemporary south-eastern Australia: how Indigenous people are creating and maintaining strong cultural identities for improved health and wellbeing AU - Tootell, N. AU - McGaw, J. AU - Patten, U.H. AU - Vance, A. T2 - BMC Public Health AB - Background: Indigenous people in Australia experience far poorer health than non-Indigenous Australians. A growing body of research suggests that Indigenous people who are strong in their cultural identity experience better health than those who are not. Yet little is known about how Indigenous people create and maintain strong cultural identities in the contemporary context. This paper explores how Indigenous people in south-eastern Australia create and maintain strong cultural identities to support their health and wellbeing. Methods: Data were collected from 44 Indigenous people living in the south-eastern Australian state of Victoria via yarning. Yarning is a cultural mode of conversation that privileges Indigenous ways of knowing, doing and being. Yarning participants were selected for their prominence within Victorian Indigenous health services and/or their prominence within the Victorian Indigenous community services sector more broadly. Due to the restrictions of COVID-19, yarns were conducted individually online via Zoom. Data were analysed employing constructivist grounded theory, which was the overarching qualitative research methodology. Results: All yarning participants considered maintaining a strong cultural identity as vital to maintaining their health and wellbeing. They did this via four main ways: knowing one’s Mob and knowing one’s Country; connecting with one’s own Mob and with one’s own Country; connecting with Community and Country more broadly; and connecting with the more creative and/or expressive elements of Culture. Importantly, these practices are listed in order of priority. Indigenous people who either do not know their Mob or Country, or for whom the connections with their own Mob and their own Country are weak, may therefore be most vulnerable. This includes Stolen Generations survivors, their descendants, and others impacted by historical and contemporary child removal practices. Conclusions: The yarns reveal some of the myriad practical ways that Indigenous people maintain a strong cultural identity in contemporary south-eastern Australia. While programs designed to foster connections to Community, Country and/or Culture may benefit all Indigenous participants, those most disconnected from their Ancestral roots may benefit most. Further research is required to determine how best to support Indigenous Victorians whose connections to their own Mob and their own Country are unable to be (re)built. © The Author(s) 2024. DA - 2024/// PY - 2024 DO - 10.1186/s12889-024-19146-w DP - Scopus VL - 24 IS - 1 ST - ‘Doing culture’ in contemporary south-eastern Australia DB - Scopus KW - Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander KW - Constructed Grounded Theory KW - Country KW - Culture KW - First Nations KW - Identity KW - Koori KW - Stolen Generations KW - Yarning KW - Yarns ER - TY - JOUR TI - Overcoming obstacles to accessibility and inclusivity in an Australian regional city: A transdisciplinary research approach AU - Tucker, Richard AU - Kelly, David AU - Frawley, Patsie AU - Johnson, Louise AU - Andrews, Fiona AU - Murfitt, Kevin AU - Watchorn, Valerie T2 - Urban Policy and Research AB - This paper describes research asking what is required to overcome entrenched obstacles to accessibility and inclusivity in an Australia regional city, in particular for those living with disability. A transdisciplinary, systems thinking approach allowed a range of stakeholders, including many with lived experiences of disability, to create a collective plan of action. This plan included interdependent interventions, independent and ahead of national governance, connecting urban planning policy to education, public transport, housing provision, co-design of public buildings, community infrastructure and inclusive employment practices. Interdisciplinarity and transdisciplinarity within regional planning research was seen as impacting the process and outcomes. DA - 2022/08/01/ PY - 2022 DO - 10.1080/08111146.2022.2103670 DP - Taylor and Francis+NEJM VL - 0 IS - 0 SP - 1 EP - 17 SN - 0811-1146 ST - Overcoming obstacles to accessibility and inclusivity in an Australian regional city UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/08111146.2022.2103670 Y2 - 2023/05/09/01:18:07 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - Beyond ‘contact’ and shared landscapes in Australian archaeology AU - Tutchener, D. AU - Claudie, D. T2 - Australian Archaeology DA - 2022/// PY - 2022 DO - 10.1080/03122417.2021.2003972 VL - 88 IS - 1 SP - 84 EP - 91 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85121374974&doi=10.1080%2f03122417.2021.2003972&partnerID=40&md5=be232a0e94bb9ff13a5d25f78ead1f5e DB - Scopus KW - landscape ER - TY - JOUR TI - Enthusiasm, commitment and project alliancing: an Australian experience AU - Walker, D.H.T. T2 - Construction Innovation AB - Team leaders require enthusiasm and commitment from their team members to enable them to be agile, adaptable and responsive. This paper uses results from a longitudinal study of a successful building construction project delivered using a project alliancing approach. Results presented use a model pioneered by the US academic Peter Senge. This helps explain the system dynamics that generated the necessary enthusiasm and commitment to support collaboration and co‐operation within and between project teams. It became clear that enthusiasm and commitment can be achieved on construction projects provided that a collaborative and co‐operative workplace environment is carefully nurtured and crafted, which not only supports drivers for enthusiasm and commitment, but also addresses barriers that inhibit those values. Experience gained from studying the exemplar project illustrated in this paper provides the basis for a model of how to create and maintain the necessary workplace environment. DA - 2002/03/01/ PY - 2002 DO - 10.1108/14714170210814667 DP - DOI.org (Crossref) VL - 2 IS - 1 SP - 15 EP - 31 LA - en SN - 1471-4175 ST - Enthusiasm, commitment and project alliancing UR - https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/14714170210814667/full/html Y2 - 2023/05/09/01:25:12 KW - Construction ER - TY - JOUR TI - New interpretative strategies for geotourism: an exploration of two Australian mining sites AU - Walliss, Jillian AU - Kok, Katherine T2 - Journal of tourism and cultural change DA - 2014/// PY - 2014 DO - https://doi.org/10.1080/14766825.2013.868902 VL - 12 IS - 1 SP - 33 EP - 49 J2 - Journal of tourism and cultural change SN - 1476-6825 UR - https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14766825.2013.868902 KW - Landscape architecture KW - Urban and cultural heritage ER - TY - CHAP TI - The right to land versus the right to landscape: Lessons from Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park, Australia AU - Walliss, Jillian T2 - The Right to Landscape CN - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b4338561~S30 DA - 2011/// PY - 2011 SP - 181 EP - 192 PB - Routledge SN - 1-315-23735-0 UR - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b4338561~S30 KW - Landscape architecture KW - Urban and cultural heritage ER - TY - JOUR TI - Health-integrated heat risk assessment in Australian cities AU - Wang, S. AU - Sun, Q.C. AU - Huang, X. AU - Tao, Y. AU - Dong, C. AU - Das, S. AU - Liu, Y. T2 - Environmental Impact Assessment Review DA - 2023/// PY - 2023 DO - 10.1016/j.eiar.2023.107176 VL - 102 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85161328568&doi=10.1016%2fj.eiar.2023.107176&partnerID=40&md5=db68a6ce8672fef398e24bc6e17ed16d DB - Scopus ER - TY - JOUR TI - The impacts of flood-mitigation structures on floodplain ecosystems: a review of three case studies from Australia and France AU - Warner, Robin F. T2 - Australian Geographer AB - This study is concerned with the physical impacts of flood-mitigation structures on ‘humanised’ and ‘natural’ floodplain ecosystems. The former constitute fertile, well drained and developed surfaces. The latter are mainly degraded wetland areas located in the backwater zones of wide, low-lying floodplains. Three rivers are investigated: the Hawkesbury–Nepean and the Macleay Rivers in New South Wales, Australia and the Durance River in southern France. Their floodplains, flood-mitigation works and floodplain ecosystems are analysed, together with site- and time-dependent differences in their floodplains, their exploitation and their degradation. Conservation of floodplains seeks to reverse wetland degradation, and to increase biodiversity and sustainability, as well as preserving developed floodplains. This study discusses gaps in our biophysical knowledge of ecosystems and the absence of ecological indicators of degradation. It also considers the lack of data on socio-economic values for what are unique, site- and time-specific, biophysical systems. Only when such inadequacies are addressed will the values of ecosystems be fully understood. Then cost-effective management might be possible. These knowledge gaps contribute to the many problems of floodplain management, which are likely to increase when the additional impacts of population increase and global warming become apparent. DA - 2022/07/03/ PY - 2022 DO - 10.1080/00049182.2022.2107995 DP - Taylor and Francis+NEJM VL - 53 IS - 3 SP - 265 EP - 295 SN - 0004-9182 ST - The impacts of flood-mitigation structures on floodplain ecosystems UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/00049182.2022.2107995 Y2 - 2023/05/09/01:07:42 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - BOOK TI - Land nation people : stories from the National Museum of Australia A3 - Weber, Therese CY - Canberra, A.C.T. DA - 2002/// PY - 2002 DP - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b5347466~S30 PB - National Museum of Australia UR - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b5347466~S30 Y2 - 2021/08/20/03:22:22 KW - Heritage KW - Urban and cultural heritage ER - TY - BOOK TI - Ngurra kuju walyja =: One country one people: Canning Stock Route Project A3 - Webster, Mags A3 - FORM A3 - National Museum of Australia CY - Perth DA - 2009/// PY - 2009 DP - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b4755078~S30 SP - 37 PB - FORM ST - Ngurra kuju walyja = UR - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b4755078~S30 KW - Heritage KW - History ER - TY - BOOK TI - Architectures of occupation in the Australian short story: Literature and the built environment after 1900 AU - West, P. T2 - Architectures of Occupation in the Australian Short Story: Literature and the Built Environment after 1900 AB - Patrick West's Architectures of Occupation in the Australian Short Story cultivates the potential for literary representations of architectural space to contribute to the development of a contemporary politics of Australian post-colonialism. West argues that the predominance of tropes of place within cultural and critical expressions of Australian post-colonialism should be re-balanced through attention to spatial strategies of anti-colonial power. To elaborate the raw material of such strategies, West develops interdisciplinary close readings of keynote stories within three female-authored, pan-twentieth century, Australian short-story collections: Bush Studies by Barbara Baynton (1902); Kiss on the Lips and Other Stories by Katharine Susannah Prichard (1932); and White Turtle: A Collection of Short Stories by Merlinda Bobis (1999). The capacity of the short- story form to prompt creative and politically germinal engagements with species of space associated with architecture and buildings is underscored. Relatedly, West argues that the recent resurgence of binary thought-on local, national, and international scales-occasions an approach to the short-story collections shaped by binary relationships like a dichotomy of inside and outside. Concluding his argument, West connects the literary and architectural critiques of the story collections to the wicked problem, linked to ongoing colonial violences, of improving Australian Indigenous housing outcomes. Innovative and interdisciplinary, this book will be of interest to scholars and students of Literary, Architectural, and Postcolonial Studies. © 2024 Patrick West. All rights reserved. DA - 2024/// PY - 2024 DP - Scopus SP - 1 LA - English SN - 978-1-04-003853-6 ST - Architectures of occupation in the Australian short story DB - Scopus ER - TY - JOUR TI - Water and land justice for Indigenous communities in the Lowbidgee Floodplain of the Murray–Darling Basin, Australia AU - Woods, R. AU - Woods, I. AU - Fitzsimons, J.A. T2 - International Journal of Water Resources Development DA - 2022/// PY - 2022 DO - 10.1080/07900627.2020.1867520 VL - 38 IS - 1 SP - 64 EP - 79 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85100554741&doi=10.1080%2f07900627.2020.1867520&partnerID=40&md5=e2f6f609e101a3be0b3f1478f7baf5c9 DB - Scopus ER - TY - JOUR TI - Water as Country on the Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara Lands, South Australia AU - Young, D. T2 - Oceania DA - 2023/// PY - 2023 DO - 10.1002/ocea.5376 VL - 93 IS - 3 SP - 246 EP - 258 UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85182496389&doi=10.1002%2focea.5376&partnerID=40&md5=16aa1ac1c88cca362884be1e12ef1faa DB - Scopus KW - landscape ER - TY - BLOG TI - Australian Indigenous Design Charter T2 - IDC AB - The Australian Indigenous Design Charter aims to help facilitate accurate and respectful representation of Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander culture in design and associated media. T… DA - 2017/10/05/T04:29:18+00:00 PY - 2017 LA - en-AU UR - https://indigenousdesigncharter.com.au/australian-indigenous-design-charter/ Y2 - 2022/05/19/06:51:34 ER - TY - ELEC TI - Letters and Fixes: Architecture Australia, July 2001 T2 - Architecture AU DA - 2021/08/20/03:45:11 PY - 2021 UR - https://architectureau.com/articles/letters-and-fixes-6/ Y2 - 2021/08/20/03:45:11 KW - Architecture ER - TY - ELEC TI - The Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies ARM Architecture T2 - Australian-Architects AB - The Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (AIATSIS) is Australia's leading centre for the research of our early Australian... 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