TY - BOOK
T1 - Hazards, Culture and Indigenous Communities: Final Project Report
AU - Weir, Jessica K.
AU - Neale, Timothy
AU - Smith, Will
N1 - © Bushfire and Natural Hazards CRC 2021. All material in this document, except as identified below, is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial 4.0 International Licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/). Material not licensed under the Creative Commons licence: Department of Industry, Science, Energy and Resources logo; Cooperative Research Centres Program logo; Bushfire and Natural Hazards CRC logo; All other logos; All photographs, graphics and figures. All content not licenced under the Creative Commons licence is all rights reserved. Permission must be sought from the copyright owner to use this material.
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - This is the Final Report of the Hazards, Culture and Indigenous Communities (HCIC) project. This project considered the challenges and opportunities arising out of engagements between Indigenous peoples and natural hazard and land management government agencies in southern Australia. The majority of this activity has focused on cultural burning, which has also been our focus. Significantly, there is very limited existing research about these engagements, and limited public sector experience in engaging with Indigenous peoples. This constrains evidenced-based policy and practice and practitioner decision making. This lack of capacity was clear in the responses to the 2019-20 bushfires. The natural hazard sector is now required to do this retrospective and forward-looking learning, to foster more culturally safe natural hazard mitigation, and better connect the logics of hazards, risk and resilience. We undertook qualitative research, primarily through forming partnerships with key practitioners working in this space and undertaking research activities that iteratively learnt from these partnerships. In this, researching both Indigenous and non-indigenous values has been important in order to navigate and analyse this intercultural context. Our research findings are structured in two sections: the first presents the results from our literature review, the second presents a synthesis of the research findings arranged under six headings, as listed below, with recommended first steps for the natural hazard sector under each heading. Given previous sector and research practices, the suggested first steps require significant sector leadership and investment in Indigenous-led research.
AB - This is the Final Report of the Hazards, Culture and Indigenous Communities (HCIC) project. This project considered the challenges and opportunities arising out of engagements between Indigenous peoples and natural hazard and land management government agencies in southern Australia. The majority of this activity has focused on cultural burning, which has also been our focus. Significantly, there is very limited existing research about these engagements, and limited public sector experience in engaging with Indigenous peoples. This constrains evidenced-based policy and practice and practitioner decision making. This lack of capacity was clear in the responses to the 2019-20 bushfires. The natural hazard sector is now required to do this retrospective and forward-looking learning, to foster more culturally safe natural hazard mitigation, and better connect the logics of hazards, risk and resilience. We undertook qualitative research, primarily through forming partnerships with key practitioners working in this space and undertaking research activities that iteratively learnt from these partnerships. In this, researching both Indigenous and non-indigenous values has been important in order to navigate and analyse this intercultural context. Our research findings are structured in two sections: the first presents the results from our literature review, the second presents a synthesis of the research findings arranged under six headings, as listed below, with recommended first steps for the natural hazard sector under each heading. Given previous sector and research practices, the suggested first steps require significant sector leadership and investment in Indigenous-led research.
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/1959.7/uws:66601
UR - https://www.bnhcrc.com.au/sites/default/files/managed/downloads/hazards_culture_and_indigenous_communities_final_report_2021.pdf
M3 - Research report
BT - Hazards, Culture and Indigenous Communities: Final Project Report
PB - Bushfire and Natural Hazards CRC
CY - East Melbourne, Vic.
ER -