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» Indigenous Participation in Australian Economies II
Indigenous Participation in Australian Economies II
- Cover
- Title page
- Imprint and copyright information
- Figures
- Maps
- Tables
- Foreword
- Introduction
- 1. Settler Economies and Indigenous Encounters: The dialectics of conquest, hybridisation and production regimes
- 2. Before the Mission Station: From first encounters to the incorporation of settlers into Indigenous relations of obligation
- 3. Tracking Wurnan: Transformations in the trade and exchange of resources in the northern Kimberley
- 4. Camels and the Transformation of Indigenous Economic Landscapes
- 5. ‘Always Anangu—always enterprising’
- 6. ‘The Art of Cutting Stone’: Aboriginal convict labour in nineteenth-century New South Wales and Van Diemen’s Land
- 7. Indigenous Workers on Methodist Missions in Arnhem Land: A skilled labour force lost
- 8. Low Wages, Low Rents, and Pension Cheques: The introduction of equal wages in the Kimberley, 1968–1969
- 9. Aboriginal Workers, Aboriginal Poverty
- 10. Indigenous Peoples and Stolen Wages in Victoria, 1869–1957
- 11. Between Locals: Interpersonal histories and the 1970s Papunya art movement
- 12. An Economy of Shells: A brief history of La Perouse Aboriginal women’s shell-work and its markets, 1880–2010
- 13. Policy Mismatch and Indigenous Art Centres: The tension between economic independence and community development
- 14. On Generating Culturally Sustainable Enterprises and Demand-Responsive Services in Remote Aboriginal Settings: A case study from north-west Queensland
- 15. Dugong Hunting as Changing Practice: Economic engagement and an Aboriginal ranger program on Mornington Island, southern Gulf of Carpentaria
- 16. Environmental Conservation and Indigenous Development through Indigenous Protected Areas and Payments for Environmental Services: A review
- Contributors
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