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Bureaucratic Occupation: Government and First Nations Peoples: Indigenous-Settler Relations in Australia and the World, cartea 5

Editat de Julie Lahn, Elizabeth Strakosch, Patrick Sullivan
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 28 dec 2024
This volume explores Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples’ interactions with public sector bureaucracies. The authors featured here consider how bureaucracy relates to colonialism, race, and sovereignty in a post-neoliberal world. They also consider the diverse ways in which Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people working within and across these sectors negotiate and engage with bureaucratic structures. Some contributors offer critiques of bureaucratic hierarchies, and others provide insights into the complexity of bureaucratic culture, drawing attention to the complex strategies of Indigenous people who aim to make bureaucracy ‘work’ for themselves and their communities. The volume overall provides a nuanced and substantive analysis of the relation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples’ to the contemporary administrative state, and an innovative perspective from which to examine Indigenous-settler relations. For those concerned with Indigenous policymaking, this volume puts forward a new approach that focuses on policy relationships, rather than processes or outcomes.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9783031677328
ISBN-10: 3031677323
Ilustrații: X, 375 p.
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.6 kg
Ediția:2024
Editura: Springer Nature Switzerland
Colecția Springer
Seria Indigenous-Settler Relations in Australia and the World

Locul publicării:Cham, Switzerland

Cuprins

Part One: Bureaucracy as Structure.- Australian Indigenous Policy at the Intersection of Bureaucracy, Colonialism, Neoliberalism and Race.- Mending Bureaucracy’s Splintered Soul: Cultural Subsidiarity for Indigenous Organisations.- terra nullius Social Policy.- Love, Moral Intensity and Governmentality: Representing Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Children in Public Policy.- ‘Staying with the State’: Prefiguring Capacities for Change within Indigenous Social policy.- Part Two: Bureaucracy as Institution.- Bureaucrats Managing the Ambiguities of Reform: a Case Study from Remote Indigenous Policy.- Authenticated Policy Knowledge: an Ethnographic Account of Evidence Use in Indigenous Health Policy.- Administrative Reform as Bureaucratic Violence in the Australian Northern Territory.- ‘Ask Aboriginal People Yourself’: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Public Servants and the Problem of Substitution.- Revisioning Bureaucracy through First Nations Public Servant Stewardship.- Part Three: Bureaucracy as Encounter.- Bureaucratised Relationships: Contracting for Change.- Urban First Nations Organisations and the Effects of New Funding Rationalities and Technologies of Governing in the New Public Management Era.- The Inclusion and Control of Indigenous Organisations in the Delivery of Remote Employment Services.- Making the Intangible Count? Metrification of the Value of Culture.- Understanding and Transforming Indigenous Policy Evaluation.

Notă biografică

Julie Lahn is an anthropologist and Fellow in the College of Arts and Social Sciences at the Australian National University. Her research engages First Nations civil/public servant insights into government bureaucracies including (with Samantha Faulkner) 'Navigating to Senior Leadership in the Australian Public Service: Identifying barriers and enablers for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in APS employment' (CAEPR, 2018). She was a researcher and educator in ANU’s Centre for Aboriginal and Economic Policy Research from 2006 to 2023.
Elizabeth Strakosch is a lecturer in public policy and politics at the School of Social and Political Sciences at the University of Melbourne, and co-director of the Institute for Collaborative Race Research. She is the author of Neoliberal Indigenous Policy: Settler Colonialism and the ‘Post-Welfare’ State (Palgrave, 2015). She is currently an Australian Research Council Early Career Research Fellow. From 2013 to 2022 she worked as a senior lecturer in policy at the University of Queensland.
Patrick Sullivan is Professor at Nulungu Research Institute, University of Notre Dame Australia, Broome, and Honorary Professor at Crawford School of Public Policy, Australian National University, Canberra. A political anthropologist, Professor Sullivan is the author of All Free Man Now: Culture, Community and Politics in the Kimberley Region North Western Australia (Aboriginal Studies Press, 1996) and Belonging Together: Dealing with the Politics of Disenchantment in Australian Indigenous Policy (Aboriginal Studies Press, 2011). He was Project Leader of the ARC Discovery Project: Reciprocal Accountability and Public Value in Aboriginal Organisations (DP160102250).

Textul de pe ultima copertă

This open access volume explores Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples’ interactions with public sector bureaucracies. The authors featured here consider how bureaucracy relates to colonialism, race, and sovereignty in a post-neoliberal world. They also consider the diverse ways in which Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people working within and across these sectors negotiate and engage with bureaucratic structures. Some contributors offer critiques of bureaucratic hierarchies, and others provide insights into the complexity of bureaucratic culture, drawing attention to the complex strategies of Indigenous people who aim to make bureaucracy ‘work’ for themselves and their communities. The volume overall provides a nuanced and substantive analysis of the relation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples’ to the contemporary administrative state, and an innovative perspective from which to examine Indigenous-settler relations. For those concerned with Indigenous policymaking, this volume puts forward a new approach that focuses on policy relationships, rather than processes or outcomes.
 

Caracteristici

Engages both scholarly and policy practitioner audiences in Australia Brings together a diverse group of key non-Indigenous and Indigenous scholars from across disciplines Focuses on bureaucracy in the context of examining Indigenous policy