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-List Of Titles -Security and belonging: reconceptualising Aboriginal spatial mobilities in Yamatji country, Western Australia

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/23030

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Title
Security and belonging: reconceptualising Aboriginal spatial mobilities in Yamatji country, Western Australia
Related
Australasian Digital Theses Program
Publisher
Australia : Macquarie University
Date
2007
Author/Creator
Prout, Sarah
Description
"December 2006".
Description
Thesis (PhD) -- Macquarie University, Division of Environmental and Life Sciences, Department of Human Geography, 2007.
Description
Bibliography: p. 284-307.
Description
Introduction -- Case-study area profile and methodology -- A walkabout race?: contemporary Aboriginal mobilities in Yamatji country -- State service provision and Aboriginal mobilities -- Security and belonging: re-conceptualising Aboriginal mobilities -- Security and belonging and the mainstream economy -- The ties that bind: negotiating security and belonging through family -- Conclusion.
Description
This dissertation explores contemporary Aboriginal spatial practices in Yamatji country, Western Australia, within the context of rural service provision by the State government. The central themes with which it engages are a) historical and contemporary conceptualisations of Aboriginal spatialities; b) the lived experiences of Aboriginal mobilities in the region; and c) the dialectical, and often contentious, relationship between Aboriginal spatial practices and public health, housing, and education services. Drawing primarily on a range of field interviews, the thesis opens up a discursive space for examining the cultural content and hidden assumptions in constructions of 'appropriate' models of spatial mobility. In taking a policy-oriented focus, it argues that the appropriate provision of basic government services requires a shift away from overly simplistic assumptions and discourses of Aboriginal mobility. Until the often subtle practices of rendering particular Aboriginal mobilities as irrational, deviant, and/or mysterious are challenged and replaced, deep-colonising practices in rural and remote Australia will persist. --The thesis reconceptualises contemporary Aboriginal spatial practices in Yamatji country based upon an examination of dynamics and circumstances that undergird Aboriginal mobilities in the region. With this empirical focus, it argues that Aboriginal spatial practices are fashioned by the processes of procuring, cultivating and contesting a sense of security and belonging. Case study material presented suggests that two primary considerations inform these processes. A post-settlement history of contested alienation from family and country (both sources from which belonging and security were traditionally derived), and a changing engagement with mainstream social and economic institutions, have produced a context in which security and belonging are iteratively derived from a number of sources. Contemporary Aboriginal spatial practices therefore take a complex variety of forms. The thesis concludes that adopting the framework of security and belonging for interpreting contemporary Aboriginal mobilities provides a starting point for engaging more effectively and intentionally with dynamic Aboriginal spatial practices in service delivery policy and practice.
Description
Mode of access: World Wide Web.
Description
x, 320 p. ill., maps
Subject Keyword
Aboriginal Australians -- Western Australia -- Yamatji Region -- Social life and customs
Subject Keyword
Aboriginal Australians -- Government policy -- Western Australia -- Yamatji Region
Subject Keyword
Nomads -- Western Australia -- Sedentarisation
Subject Keyword
Migration, Internal -- Western Australia -- Yamatji Region
Subject Keyword
Indigenous peoples -- Social conditions -- Western Australia -- Yamatji Region
Subject Keyword
Aboriginal spatial mobility
Subject Keyword
spatial mobility
Subject Keyword
Yamatji
Resource Type
Thesis PhD
Organisation
Macquarie University. Dept. of Human Geography

Identifier
http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/23030
Identifier
1285320
Language
eng
Rights
Copyright disclaimer: http://www.copyright.mq.edu.au
Rights
Copyright Sarah Prout 2007.
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"Security and belonging: reconceptualising Aboriginal spatial mobilities in Yamatji country, Western Australia"
 
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