Project leader: Joe Morrison, NAILSMA
Indigenous Australians own and occupy large tracts of land
across northern Australia. They also make up a significant (and
rapidly growing) proportion of the population. Consequently, land
and sea management issues are (as they have always been) of
paramount concern for many Aboriginal people in these regions.
In the past and through to the present, Indigenous groups have
drawn on a sophisticated understanding of human/environmental
relationships in order to successfully manage their vast land and
sea estates. Sometimes referred to as Indigenous Knowledge (IK)
this understanding is now, in some cases, seriously threatened.
In the context of mainstream Natural Resource Management (NRM)
this situation has come about for a number of reasons. In many
cases, non Indigenous researchers and policy makers have
undervalued, or simply failed to grasp, the contributions IK
continues to make to the maintenance of healthy country.
Consequently, Aboriginal people have often been excluded from
decision making processes which directly impact on their lives and
livelihoods while long term investment in IK support programmes has
been hard to find.
The IK project was devised in order to overcome some of these
obstacles. Accordingly, the key objective will be to develop A
Strategy for the Conservation and Application of Indigenous
Knowledge across North Australia. This will be achieved
through:
- Documenting the needs and aspirations of Traditional Owners
with respect to the conservation of IK across north Australia;
- Identifying the constraints that impede the use, articulation
and engagement of IK into broader NRM Research and Design;
- Developing an overview of what has been undertaken in Australia
and Internationally and why it has succeeded or failed;
- Developing an overview of other relevant issues. (These will
include Intellectual Property Rights, Information Technology
requirements, communication needs, resourcing needs for on country
activities and collaborations between Indigenous landowners and
researchers);
- Providing practical tools for Traditional Owners to enable them
to develop equitable working relationships with research and other
agencies;
- Communicating findings to ensure full exposure and investment
in local and regional scale knowledge conservation in the immediate
to short term.
The careful articulation of these issues and solutions
represents core NAILSMA business. In many ways, Indigenous
individuals and communities across northern Australia stand at a
cross roads. Having won back a substantial part of the Indigenous
estate, a second struggle now ensues: a quest to find appropriate
support for Indigenous cultural natural resource management with a
view to securing long term social, environmental and economic
health and prosperity.
The Indigenous Knowledge Strategy is in the process of being
finalised and we hope to have this published in October 2008.