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- Title
REVISITING NEOLIBERALISM: ABORIGINAL SELF-DETERMINATION, EDUCATION AND CULTURAL SUSTAINABILITY IN AUSTRALIA.
- Authors
Stanton, Sue; Adachi, Chie; Huijser, Henk
- Abstract
In this paper we discuss the ways in which successive governments have addressed Indigenous affairs and we argue that the Australian approach is still firmly rooted in colonial attitudes and discourses. Although self-determination is a core concept of neoliberalism, the dominant political ideology for both Labor and Liberal parties in Australia since the 1980s, it does not extend to Indigenous affairs, which is firmly couched in colonial frameworks. In this paper specific examples of education and cultural sustainability (including language development and sustainability) are used as case studies to explore what genuine self-determination would mean in an Australian context. Overall, it is argued that an honest and real neoliberal approach takes political courage and vision, but would place the power to control Indigenous affairs in the hands of the people whose affairs we are actually talking about.
- Subjects
AUSTRALIA; NEOLIBERALISM; EDUCATION of Aboriginal Australians; LANGUAGE acquisition
- Publication
Sites: A Journal of Social Anthropology & Cultural Studies, 2015, Vol 12, Issue 1, p107
- ISSN
0112-5990
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.11157/sites-vol12iss1id259