Alternate Development for Indigenous Territories of Difference
Date
2011
Authors
Altman, Jon
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Canberra, ACT : Centre for Aboriginal Economic Policy Research (CAEPR), The Australian National University
Abstract
The Indigenous estate, the assemblage of Indigenous lands held under a diversity of land rights and native title
regimes now covers an estimated 1.7 million sq kms or 22 per cent of continental Australia. For a variety of reasons,
including a restricted common property regime that is the dominant form of land tenure and remoteness and
the nature of Australia’s settler colonisation, much of the Indigenous estate is environmentally intact. Indigenous
people, living on the lands that they now own, are well positioned to make valuable environmental contributions
to critical national efforts in three areas: the conservation of biodiversity during a period of inevitable climate
change and associated species loss; carbon abatement and sequestration to offset national greenhouse gas
emissions; and management of fresh water quality and environmental flows.
In this article, I want to argue that the Indigenous lands can be conceptualised as ‘territories of difference’, a term I
borrow from political ecologist Arturo Escobar (2008), where different ways of thinking about land and resources
might become increasingly dominant as an alternate form of development. Escobar (2008: 196) entreats us to
break the hegemony of seeing Aboriginal territory, in his case in Pacific Columbia, as part of the conventional
development model and to find political space within the hegemonic state to allow for the underwriting of a
different form of development based on conservation.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Source
Type
Working/Technical Paper
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
Open Access
License Rights
DOI
Restricted until
Downloads
File
Description