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CARING FOR COUNTRY: An Indigenous Propitious Niche in 21 st Century Australia. Dr Dermot Smyth Research Institute for the Environment and Livelihoods Charles Darwin University. Niche Messages. What is a propitious niche? How does it apply to Caring for Country?
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CARING FOR COUNTRY:An Indigenous Propitious Niche in 21st Century Australia Dr Dermot Smyth Research Institute for the Environment and Livelihoods Charles Darwin University
Niche Messages • What is a propitious niche? • How does it apply to Caring for Country? • Evolution of the Caring for Country niche • Breaking Barriers: • Re-thinking Caring for Country as “Cultural Selection”
Encountering the “Propitious Niche” “Closing The Gap” Workshop late 1970s Peter Ucko Neville Bonner
What is a Propitious Niche? “Propitious” Attended by favourable circumstances “Niche” A position particularly adapted to its occupant(and vice versa)
Propitious niches in America Iroquois Steel workers In New York African American soldiers Irish Police in New York
What makes a niche propitious? • Applies existing skills, knowledge or interests • Valued by minority group and wider society • Limited competition from wider society • Entry point into wider employment opportunities • An opportunity pathway • Not a limited destiny
What is Caring for Country? Weed control Feral animal control Fire management Satellite tracking Cultural heritage management Research
Caring for Country as a propitious niche • Applies inherent skills and cultural knowledge • Highly valued by Indigenous communities • Highly valued by wider society • Limited competition from wider society • Potential for subsequent employment opportunities
Evolution of Caring for Country Niche • Based on ancient and enduring responsibility for country
Evolution of Caring for Country Niche • Land Rights – 1976 onwards
Evolution of Caring for Country Niche • Co-management of national parks from 1979 onwards
Evolution of Caring for Country Niche • Palm Island Ranger Service 1983
Kowanyama – Western Cape York • 1989 Ranger employed • 1990 Land & Natural Resource Management Office • Independent cultural evolution? Colin Lawrence
Cape York Community Rangers from early ‘90s • Supported by ATSIC and Cairns TAFE College • Where were the research institutions? Study tour of Northern Territory early 1990s
Coastal Ranger Groups across northern Australia www.nailsma.org.au/projects/srm
Indigenous Protected Areas (IPAs) from 1998 • Voluntary protected areas • Declared by Traditional Owners • Recognised nationally and internationally • Supported by IPA Program and other partners • Initially based on Indigenous tenure • Increasingly based on “country” (land and sea) • Comprise over 40% of Australia’s protected area estate
Working on Country Program • From 2008 • Funding for Indigenous Ranger employment • Currently over 630 Ranger employed • Over $320 million for 5 years from 2013 • Commitment to fund 730 Rangers by 2015
Ongoing Indigenous Drivers • Traditional Owners • Community Councils • Land Councils and other regional organisations • Torres Strait Regional Authority • North Australian Indigenous Land and Sea Management Alliance (NAILSMA) • Environment Minister’s Indigenous Advisory Committee
Other investors • Fee-for-Service contracts • Conservation NGOs • Philanthropics • Research institutions
The Caring for Country ‘Industry’ today • 60Indigenous Protected Areas • Over 1,000 Indigenous rangers and other Caring for Country workers employed • Total investment $100 million per year?
Remote Community Case Study Indigenous Land and Sea Management Group Local Indigenous employment: Indigenous-owned resort Local Indigenous employment: Multi-national mine Local Indigenous employment: 0% 5% 90%
Benefits of Caring for Country • Employment • Education and Training • Enhanced self esteem, health and wellbeing • Contribution to biodiversity conservation • Contribution to cultural maintenance • Reconciliation and partnership building
Policy & Research Implications • Ongoing support for locally driven, well coordinated, purposeful Caring for Country programs • Support for other propitious niches • What are they? • Where are they? • Why are they propitious? • Contribution to understanding “The Gap”? • Indigenous Rangers • Non-Indigenous Coordinators
What’s Going On? Tenure Country Indigenous Knowledge Western Science Holistic Land/Sea Management Separate Land/Sea Management Selective advantage Caring for Country Contemporary value
Encountering Cultural Selection Agner Fog “Cultural Selection” Kluwer Academic Publishers 1999 2009
What is Cultural Selection? • Analogous to Natural Selection • Not related to Social Darwinism! • “Memes” and “Meme complexes” • Transmitted • Change (mutate) • Selectively advantageous • Selectively disadvantageous • Cultural adaptation and evolution
How does this help? • A framework for understanding cultural change? • Incentive to seek selective advantages for cultural values? • Hasten supportive policy development and research?
Tenure-based IPA Land Sea Private Land Marine Park Forest Reserve Aboriginal land (Exclusive Tenure unlikely) IPA National Park
Country-based IPA Land Sea Land Sea Private Land Marine Park Forest Reserve Aboriginal land (Exclusive tenure unlikely) National Park
Country-based IPA Land Sea
Country-based IPAIntegrated land and sea country IPA Land Sea