TY - JOUR
T1 - Tomorrow’s Country
T2 - Practice-oriented principles for Indigenous cultural fire research in south-east Australia
AU - Rawluk, Andrea
AU - Neale, Timothy
AU - Smith, Will
AU - Doherty, Tim
AU - Ritchie, Euan
AU - Pascoe, Jack
AU - Murray, Minda
AU - Carter, Rodney
AU - Bourke, Mick
AU - Falconer, Scott
AU - Nimmo, Dale
AU - Price, Jodi
AU - White, Matt
AU - Bates, Paul
AU - Wong, Nathan
AU - Nelson, Trent
AU - Atkinson, Amos
AU - Webster, Deborah
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Authors. Geographical Research published by John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd on behalf of Institute of Australian Geographers.
PY - 2023/8
Y1 - 2023/8
N2 - First Nations peoples are revitalising diverse cultural fire practices and knowledge. Institutional and societal recognition of these practices is growing. Yet there has been little academic research on these fire practices in south-east Australia, let alone research led by Aboriginal people. We are a group of Indigenous and settler academics, practitioners, and experts focused on cultural fire management in the Victorian Loddon Mallee region. Using interviews and workshops, we facilitated knowledge sharing and discussion. In this paper, we describe three practice-oriented principles to develop and maintain collaborations across Aboriginal groups, researchers, and government in the Indigenous-led revitalisation of fire on Country: relationships (creating reciprocity and trust), Country (working with place and people), and power (acknowledging structures and values). Collaborations based on these principles will be unique to each temporal, social, cultural, and geographic context. Considering our findings, we acknowledge the challenges that exist and the opportunities that emerge to constructively hold space to grow genuinely collaborative research that creates change. We suggest that the principles we identify can be applied by anyone wanting to form genuine collaborations around the world as the need for social–ecological justice grows.
AB - First Nations peoples are revitalising diverse cultural fire practices and knowledge. Institutional and societal recognition of these practices is growing. Yet there has been little academic research on these fire practices in south-east Australia, let alone research led by Aboriginal people. We are a group of Indigenous and settler academics, practitioners, and experts focused on cultural fire management in the Victorian Loddon Mallee region. Using interviews and workshops, we facilitated knowledge sharing and discussion. In this paper, we describe three practice-oriented principles to develop and maintain collaborations across Aboriginal groups, researchers, and government in the Indigenous-led revitalisation of fire on Country: relationships (creating reciprocity and trust), Country (working with place and people), and power (acknowledging structures and values). Collaborations based on these principles will be unique to each temporal, social, cultural, and geographic context. Considering our findings, we acknowledge the challenges that exist and the opportunities that emerge to constructively hold space to grow genuinely collaborative research that creates change. We suggest that the principles we identify can be applied by anyone wanting to form genuine collaborations around the world as the need for social–ecological justice grows.
KW - collaboration
KW - cultural fire
KW - governance
KW - Indigenous peoples
KW - practice
KW - south-east Australia
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U2 - 10.1111/1745-5871.12596
DO - 10.1111/1745-5871.12596
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85159063369
SN - 1745-5871
VL - 61
SP - 333
EP - 348
JO - Geographical Research
JF - Geographical Research
IS - 3
ER -