Remote Indigenous settlements – more than tiny dots on a map
Mission Australia: Going Places Program – Cost Benefit Assessment
The document is a written assessment of the cost effectiveness of Mission Australia’s Going Places program. The assessment covers the qualified benefits for participants, intangible benefits and testimonies. The costs benefits assessment also covers the government benefits and savings from the program.
Nourishing Terrains – Australian Aboriginal Views of Landscape and Wilderness
The Nourishing Terrains book explores Aboriginal views of the landscape and their continuing relationship with the land along with their comprehensive knowledge of its resources and needs. The book provides an overview of Indigenous perspectives, and captures the spiritual and emotional significance of the land to Aboriginal people. The aim of this is to foster a greater understanding amongst non-Indigenous Australians of the significance of Aboriginal connections with country and in turn show that understanding is essential to develop better relationships between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people.
, Nourishing Terrains explores Aboriginal views of the landscape and their continuing relationship with the land along with their comprehensive knowledge of its resources and needs. The book provides an overview of Indigenous perspectives, and captures the spiritual and emotional significance of the land to Aboriginal people. The aim of this is to foster a greater understanding amongst non-Indigenous Australians of the significance of Aboriginal connections with country and in turn show that understanding is essential to develop better relationships between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people.
, Nourishing Terrains explores Aboriginal views of the landscape and their continuing relationship with the land along with their comprehensive knowledge of its resources and needs. The book provides an overview of Indigenous perspectives, and captures the spiritual and emotional significance of the land to Aboriginal people. The aim of this is to foster a greater understanding amongst non-Indigenous Australians of the significance of Aboriginal connections with country and in turn show that understanding is essential to develop better relationships between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people.
, Nourishing Terrains explores Aboriginal views of the landscape and their continuing relationship with the land along with their comprehensive knowledge of its resources and needs. The book provides an overview of Indigenous perspectives, and captures the spiritual and emotional significance of the land to Aboriginal people. The aim of this is to foster a greater understanding amongst non-Indigenous Australians of the significance of Aboriginal connections with country and in turn show that understanding is essential to develop better relationships between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people.
Colonizing bricks and mortar: Indigenous place-making through art objects and artifacts
Decolonizing the Discourse of Environmental Knowledge in Settler Societies, in ‘Culture and waste: the creation and destruction of value’
The book chapter, Decolonizing the Discourse of Environmental, is written by Deborah Bird Rose. The chapter, written in the form of an essay, discusses decolonisation as a practice, Indigenous ecological knowledge and ethics through and in comparison, to a western worldview.
Exploring a Cross-Cultural Theory of Architecture
The Exploring a Cross-Cultural Theory of Architecture article contributes to the development of a theoretical framework to address and explain all human behaviour linked with buildings, dwellings and settlements, in terms of both creating and using such environments. The aim of the article is to seek a theory that can be objectively applied to understanding interactions between the architectural values and building traditions of different cultures. The article argues for the configuration of a theory of architecture that can serve as a tool for understanding the nature of all designed, arranged, and/or constructed environments used as human habitats across all cultural contexts
Housing strategies that improve Indigenous health outcomes
Agenda: The moving city as palimpsest
Aboriginal Cultural Competency Standards: Self-assessment process for community housing providers
This document was produced by Origin Communications Australia and published in 2016. It was developed for the Community Housing sector, the NSW Federation of Housing Associations and the NSW Department of Family and Community Services as part of the Community Housing for Aboriginal People Strategy. It outlines the Self-Assessment Process for Community Housing Providers to follow regarding Aboriginal Cultural Literacy Standards.