Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gbm5v Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-28T00:05:50.809Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Identifying Training Needs to Improve Indigenous Community Representatives Input into Environmental Resource Management Consultative Processes: A case study of the Bundjalung Nation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 June 2015

David Lloyd*
Affiliation:
Southern Cross University
Fiona Norrie
Affiliation:
Environment Protection Agency
*
School of Environmental Science and Management, Southern Cross University, PO Box 157, Lismore NSW 2480, Australia. Email: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

Despite increased engagement of Indigenous representatives as participants on consultative panels charged with processes of natural resource management, concerns have been raised by both Indigenous representatives and management agencies regarding the ability of Indigenous people to have quality input into the decisions these processes produce. In order to determine how to more effectively engage Australian Aboriginal peoples in the management process, this article describes the results of interviews with Elders of the Bundjalung Nation and other community representatives who represent their community's interests on natural resource management boards within their traditional country. Community representatives identified the factors they considered important in understanding natural resource management and administrative processes and where training would enable them to make a significant contribution to the consultation process. It also highlighted a need for non-Indigenous managers to gain a greater understanding of Indigenous knowledge systems and protocols.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2004

References

Alba, J. W., & Hasher, L. (1983). Is memory schematic? Psychological Bulletin, 93, 203231.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alcorn, V. G. (1993). Kyogle: A part of paradise. Lismore: Northern Star Ltd.Google Scholar
Alderson, M. & Jonaton, N. (1997). Wetlands in Kakadu National Park: Aboriginal traditional owners' perspective. Canberra, ACT: Commonwealth of Australia.Google Scholar
Altman, J. C., Ginn, A., & Smith, D. E. (1993). Existing and potential mechanisms for Indigenous involvement in coastal zone resource management. Canberra: Commonwealth of Australia.Google Scholar
Australian Bureau of Statistics (1996). 1996 Consensus of Population: Lismore LGA. [Online], Available: CDATA96 []. 2002.Google Scholar
Baker, C., Woenne-Green, S., & the Mutitjulu Community (1992). The role of Aboriginal ecological knowledge in ecosystem management. In Birckhead, T., Delacy, T. & Smith, L. (Eds.), Aboriginal involvement in parks andprotected areas (pp. 3944). Canberra: Aboriginal Studies Press.Google Scholar
Banerjee, S. B. (2000). Whose land is it anyway? National interest, indigenous stakeholders, and colonial discourses. Organization & Environment, 13(1): 338.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beierle, T. (1999). Using social goals to evaluate public participation in environmental decisions. Policy Studies Review, 16(3): 75103.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Birch, T. (1996). A land so inviting and still without inhabitants: Erasing Koori culture from (post-) colonial landscapes. In Darian-Smith, K., Gunner, L. & Nuttall, S. (Eds.), Text, theory, space: Land, literature and history in South Africa and Australia. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Bower, G. H., Black, J. B., & Turner, T. J. (1979). Scripts in memory for text. Cognitive Psychology, 11: 177220.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burke, E. M. (1968). Citizen participation strategies. AIP Journal, 34, 287294.Google Scholar
Christie, M. J. (1985). Aboriginal perspectives on experience and learning: The role of Aboriginal education. Melbourne: Deakin University Press.Google Scholar
Department of Land and Water Conservation (DLWC) (2002). Northern Rivers Draft Catchment Blueprint. Alstonville: DLWC.Google Scholar
Dermot Smyth, J. S. (1996). Indigenous protected areas: Conservation partnerships with Indigenous landholders. Canberra, ACT: Environment Australia.Google Scholar
Drummond, K. (1991). How to conduct a training needs analysis. Queensland: Gull Publishing.Google Scholar
Everett, J. (1997). Aboriginal education and colonialism: Our earthlinks under threat. Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 13: 1116.Google Scholar
Fiorino, D. (1990). Citizen participation and environmental risk: A survey of institutional mechanisms. Science, Technology, and Human Values, 15(2): 226243.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hamilton, J. T., & Viscusi, W. K. (1999). How costly is clean? An analysis of the benefits and costs of Superfund site remediations. Journal ofPolicy Analysis and Management, 18(1), 227.Google Scholar
Harris, S. (1990). Two way Aboriginal schooling: Education and cultural survival. Canberra: Aboriginal Studies Press.Google Scholar
Kamas, E. N., Reder, L. M., & Ayers, M. S. (1996). Partial matching in the Moses illusion: Response bias not sensitivity. Memory and Cognition, 24: 687699.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kardash, C. A. M., Royer, J. M., & Greene, B. A. (1988). Effects of schemata on both encoding and retrieval of information from prose. Journal of Educational Psychology, 80(3): 324329.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kinslow-Harris, J. (1977). Culture and learning: Tradition and education in Northeast Arnhem Land. University of New Mexico.Google Scholar
Libesman, T. & Cunneen, C. (1995). Indigenous people and the law in Australia. Sydney: Butterworths.Google Scholar
Lloyd, D. (1996). Saltwater people. Townsville: Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority.Google Scholar
Marilee, K. (1995). Women and Empowerment. New York: United Nations Non-Governmental Liaison Service.Google Scholar
Marquardt, M.J. (2001). Action learning- does it work differently in different cultures? In Sankaran, S., Dick, B., Passfield, R. & Swepson, P. (Eds.), Effective change management using action learning and action research: Concepts, frameworks, processes and applications, (chapter 5). Lismore: Southern Cross University Press.Google Scholar
Maykut, P., & Morehouse, R. (1994). Beginning qualitative research: A philosophic and practical Guide. London: Routledge Farmer.Google Scholar
Morgan, D., & Slade, M. (1998). A case for incorporating Aboriginal perspectives in education. Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 26(2): 611.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Perhac, R. (1996). Defining risk: normative considerations. Human and Ecological Risk Assessment, 2(2): 381392.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Perhac, R. (1998). Comparative risk assessment: Where doesthe public fit in? Science, Technology & Human Values, 23(2): 221242.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Reder, L. M., & Kusbit, G.W. (1991). Locus of Moses illusion: Imperfect coding, retrieval, or match? Journal of Memory and Language 30: 385406.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ristock, J. L., & Pennell, J. (1996). Community research as empowerment; feminist links, postmodern interruptions. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Sagie, A., & Koslowsky, M. (2000). Participation and empowerment in organisations. California: Sage Publications.Google Scholar
Shailor, J. G. (1994). Empowerment in dispute mediation - A cultural analysis of communication. USA: Praeger Publishers.Google Scholar
Smith, E. (1998). Mental representation and memory. In Gilbert, D., Fiske, S. & Lindzey, G. (Eds.), The handbook of social psychology, vol 1. (pp. 391445). Boston: McGraw Hill.Google Scholar
Stern, P. C., & Fineberg, H. V. (1996). Understanding risk: Informing decisions in a democratic society. Washington, DC: National Academy Press.Google Scholar
The Review Steering Committee (1998). The review of Aboriginal involvement in the management of the wettTropics world heritage area, Volume 1. Cairns: Wet Tropics Management Authority.Google Scholar
Tindale, N. B. (1974). Aboriginal Tribes of Australia: Their terrain, environmental controls, distribution, limits and proper names. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Toyne, P. J. R. (1991). Reconciliation, or the new dispossession? Habitat Australia, 19(3), 810.Google Scholar
Walker, B. (2002). Bundjalung representative and training program co-ordinator, Dept. Land and Water Conservation, Northern Rivers, Alstonville, personal communication.Google Scholar
WCED. (1997). Public involvement in comparative risk projects. Boulder, CO, Western Center for Environmental Decision-Making.Google Scholar
Wengraf, T. (2001). Qualitative Research Interviewing. London: Sage Publications.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wolfe, J., Bechard, G., Cizek, P., & Cole, D. (1991). Indigenous and western knowledge and resource management systems (Unpublished). Vancouver: University School of Rural Planning and Development.Google Scholar
Worboys, G. L., Michael, & DeLacy, Terry. (2001). Protected Area Management: Principles and Practice. Melbourne, Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Yosie, T., & Herbst, T. (1998). Using stakeholder processes in environmental decision making: An evaluation of lessons learned, key issues, and future challenges. Washington, DC: Ruder Finn Washington.Google Scholar