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Aboriginal People ‘Talking Back’ to Policy in Rural Australia

机译:澳大利亚农村土着人民反对政策

摘要

How does a geographically remote Australian Aboriginal community ensure that culturally and locally important priorities are recognised in policy? This paper discusses a case study of Indigenous community engagement in policy making, revealing some of the challenges community leaders face and the strategies they implement in their struggle for a strong say and hand in designing appropriate policy responses to local problems. The case study community is Walgett, a remote New South Wales community with a large Aboriginal population, distinguished in history for its part in the 1965 Freedom Ride which highlighted racial segregation and discrimination across outback Australia. Today Walgett ranks as one of Australia’s most disadvantaged communities (Vinson, 2007), and hence was chosen as one of 29 priority remote Aboriginal communities to be the focus of the Australian Government’s Remote Service Delivery commitment, part of the Closing the Gap agenda.
机译:地理上偏远的澳大利亚原住民社区如何确保在政策上认识到文化和当地重要的优先事项?本文讨论了土著社区参与政策制定的案例研究,揭示了社区领导人面临的一些挑战以及他们在争取有说服力的斗争中实施的策略,并针对当地问题设计了适当的政策应对措施。案例研究社区是沃尔盖特(Walgett),这是一个偏远的新南威尔士州社区,土著人口众多,在1965年的“自由骑行”中享有突出的历史地位,该活动突出了澳大利亚内陆地区的种族隔离和歧视。如今,Walgett已被列为澳大利亚最弱势的社区之一(Vinson,2007年),因此被选为29个优先偏远的原住民社区之一,成为澳大利亚政府远程服务交付承诺的重点,也是“缩小差距”议程的一部分。

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