Training
Name | Organisation | Description | Region | Tag(s) |
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Anthropologists play a significant role in the native title system in Australia, especially in undertaking connection research to demonstrate the evidentiary basis of claims. In 2010, recognising the lack of sufficiently qualified anthropologists working in native title, the Australian Government introduced a grants program to attract and retain practitioners. This paper describes a field school in the Northern Territory that was funded through the Native Title Anthropologist Grants Program. Through dialogue and interaction with the Aboriginal community, the organisers aimed to expose and interpret ideas, practices, memories, mythologies, relationships and other aspects of society and culture in the terms required for the demonstration of native title. Both novel and successful, the field school points the way for future training initiatives in native title anthropology. |
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NSW Government | ||||
William Angliss Charitable Fund | ||||
Northern Territory Government | ||||
ConocoPhillips Australia | ||||
Darwin International Airport | ||||
Government of South Australia | ||||
Helen MacPherson Smith Trust | ||||
William Buckland Foundation | ||||
National Indigenous Australians Agency | ||||
Aboriginal Benefits Foundation Trust | ||||
Foundation for Rural and Regional Renewal | ||||
The Myer Foundation | ||||
ACT Government Community Services | ||||
NSW Department of Education | ||||
NSW Government | ||||
NSW Department of Primary Industries | ||||
Queensland Department of Agriculture and Fisheries | ||||
Victorian Fisheries Authority | ||||
RecFishWest |