Modern Slavery in Remote Australia?, by Jon Altman
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The government’s welfare reforms for Indigenous Australians look like slavery
Latest comment: This needs much wider coverage...good one. eva
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The government’s welfare reforms for Indigenous Australians look like slavery
Latest comment: This needs much wider coverage...good one. eva
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The hope to persuade and co-opt—the failure of the Intervention
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The stain of the Intervention on Indigenous–non-Indigenous relations.
Latest comment: Well written Joe. Hang in there.
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The Intervention’s role in state-based child abuse.
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In the aftermath of the Intervention there has been a profound shift in the terms of national attention to Indigenous affairs.
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Join in conversation with Gary Foley, Djon Mundine, Jon Altman, Phillip Batty, Melinda Hinkson and Libby Porter
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‘A series of discussions with local and international speakers on ‘postcolonialism applied’: action-oriented and grounded in its practices—from the word to the world, from past to present, from exceptional moments to the everyday.’
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A major challenge all political parties face is that Indigenous poverty is deeply embedded and structural and will take a long time, innovative policy and major investments to address. The diversity of Indigenous circumstances means that a diversity of approaches will be required, but the major parties are committed to mainstreaming or normalisation options. It is only the Greens that are serious about the recognition of difference and the need for approaches that emphasise social justice.