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Indigenous participation in Australian economies. [I], Historical and anthropological perspectives / edited by Ian Keen.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: Acton, A.C.T. : ANU E Press, 2010Description: 1 online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781921666872
  • 1921666870
Other title:
  • Historical and anthropological perspectives
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Indigenous participation in Australian economies : historical and anthropological perspectives.DDC classification:
  • 306.30994 22
LOC classification:
  • GN448 .I53 2010
Online resources:
Contents:
Introduction / Ian Keen -- The emergence of Australian settler capitalism in the nineteenth century and the disintegration/integration of Aboriginal societies: hybridisation and local evolution within the world market / Christopher Lloyd -- The interpretation of Aboriginal 'property' on the Australian colonial frontier / Ian Keen -- From island to mainland: Torres Strait Islanders in the Australian labour force / Jeremy Beckett -- Exchange and appropriation: the Wurnan economy and Aboriginal land and labour at Karunjie Station, north-western Australia / Anthony Redmond and Fiona Skyring -- Dingo scalping and the frontier economy in the north-west of South Australia / Diana Young -- Peas, beans and riverbanks: seasonal picking and dependence in the Tuross Valley / John White -- 'Who you is?' Work and identity in Aboriginal New South Wales / Lorraine Gibson -- Sustainable Aboriginal livelihoods and the Pilbara mining boom / Sarah Holcombe -- Realities, simulacra and the appropriation of Aboriginality in Kakadu's tourism / Chris Haynes.
Summary: "The chapters of the volume bring new theoretical analyses and empirical data to bear on a continuing discussion about the variety of ways in which Indigenous people in Australia have been engaged in the colonial and post-colonial economy. Contributions cover settler capitalism, concepts of property on the frontier, Torres Strait Islanders in the mainland economy, the pastoral industry in the Kimberley, doggers in the Western Desert, bean and pea picking on the South Coast of New South Wales, attitudes to employment in general in western New South Wales, relations of Aboriginal people to mining in the Pilbara, and relations with the uranium mine and Kakadu National Park in the Top End. The chapters also contribute to discussions about theoretical and analytical frameworks relevant to these kinds of contexts and bring critical perspectives to bear on current issues of development."--Publisher's description
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Introduction / Ian Keen -- The emergence of Australian settler capitalism in the nineteenth century and the disintegration/integration of Aboriginal societies: hybridisation and local evolution within the world market / Christopher Lloyd -- The interpretation of Aboriginal 'property' on the Australian colonial frontier / Ian Keen -- From island to mainland: Torres Strait Islanders in the Australian labour force / Jeremy Beckett -- Exchange and appropriation: the Wurnan economy and Aboriginal land and labour at Karunjie Station, north-western Australia / Anthony Redmond and Fiona Skyring -- Dingo scalping and the frontier economy in the north-west of South Australia / Diana Young -- Peas, beans and riverbanks: seasonal picking and dependence in the Tuross Valley / John White -- 'Who you is?' Work and identity in Aboriginal New South Wales / Lorraine Gibson -- Sustainable Aboriginal livelihoods and the Pilbara mining boom / Sarah Holcombe -- Realities, simulacra and the appropriation of Aboriginality in Kakadu's tourism / Chris Haynes.

"The chapters of the volume bring new theoretical analyses and empirical data to bear on a continuing discussion about the variety of ways in which Indigenous people in Australia have been engaged in the colonial and post-colonial economy. Contributions cover settler capitalism, concepts of property on the frontier, Torres Strait Islanders in the mainland economy, the pastoral industry in the Kimberley, doggers in the Western Desert, bean and pea picking on the South Coast of New South Wales, attitudes to employment in general in western New South Wales, relations of Aboriginal people to mining in the Pilbara, and relations with the uranium mine and Kakadu National Park in the Top End. The chapters also contribute to discussions about theoretical and analytical frameworks relevant to these kinds of contexts and bring critical perspectives to bear on current issues of development."--Publisher's description

English.

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