{"id":3745,"date":"2023-09-29T02:03:48","date_gmt":"2023-09-29T02:03:48","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/regenesis.org.au\/?p=3745"},"modified":"2024-02-10T23:34:39","modified_gmt":"2024-02-10T23:34:39","slug":"reimagining-conservation-in-australia","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/regenesis.org.au\/2023\/09\/29\/reimagining-conservation-in-australia\/","title":{"rendered":"Reimagining Conservation in Australia"},"content":{"rendered":"

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Recognising First Nations Knowledge Systems<\/h2>\n

Thanks to the Blue Mountains World Heritage Institute’s recent newsletter, calling for us all to become Blue Mountains Guardians of this precious area of Australia, I found out about this important forum for reimagining conservation in Australia by bringing together First Nations scholars and knowledge holders with non-Indigenous scholars and activists in the area of nature conservation and environmental management.<\/p>\n

Profound changes are afoot.\u00a0 As we think about the approaching summer and fire season, more and more attention has been given to First Nations systems of fire management (cool burning), a methodology they developed over millennia that shaped the Australian landscape.\u00a0 Indigenous scholars and environmental managers are leaning how to TALK back to ‘white’ knowledge holders.\u00a0 ‘White’ knowledge holders are losing some of their assumed intellectual arrogance, that Western science has all the answers.\u00a0 But we non-Indigenous folk have a long way to go for unconscious bias operates at many, many levels in how we see and act in the world.<\/p>\n

The Reimagining Conservation Forum – Working Together for Healthy Country\u00a0was a collaboration between the North Australian Indigenous Land and Sea Management Alliance (<\/span>NAILSMA<\/span><\/a>), Protected Areas Collaboration (<\/span>PAC<\/a><\/span>), Australian Committee for IUCN (<\/span>ACIUCN<\/span><\/a>) and\u00a0<\/span>NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service<\/a><\/span>. This First Nations-led Forum brought together First Nations and non-Indigenous leaders and practitioners involved in the policies and practices of land and sea management across Australia.<\/span><\/p>\n

\u200b<\/span><\/span>The Forum, involving over 100 people was held in Brisbane over three days, November 2nd – 4th, 2022. Day 1 of the Forum was for a 30-person Focus Group of First Nations leaders in land and sea management, by invitation. A wider group representing a balance of First Nations and non-Indigenous people, participated on days 2 and 3 (November 3-4).<\/span><\/p>\n

Below is a screen grab of the poster issued by the Forum, which outlines the six key themes that were adopted to shape future practice in land and sea management and conservation. Although weaving knowledge systems is identified as the 3rd theme, it actually underpins all the other themes.<\/p>\n

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  1. Recognising the rights of Indigenous people in Country – their social, cultural and economic needs<\/li>\n
  2. Valuing culture and recognising Indigenous cultural authority<\/li>\n
  3. Weaving knowledge systems<\/li>\n
  4. Equity in managing Country<\/li>\n
  5. Managing Country together<\/li>\n
  6. Economic opportunities arising from renewable energy and native produce must be in harmony with Indigenous cultures and ensure benefit to local \u00a0communities<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n

    \"\"However unless the differences in knowledge systems is acknowledged, and ways found to weave them together at an ontological level, as well as an epistemological level, it is the nature of the Western knowledge system for it to merely pay lip service to this principle.<\/p>\n

    The Western market-based nature of modern corporate institutions is ruthless in the pursuit of its extractivist<\/em> logic.\u00a0 We see this playing out at the moment in the probe into malfeasance in the consulting sector, the mining sector, the housing crisis, growing wealth inequality, and wage theft in the gig economy.<\/p>\n

    As Indigenous individuals and community seek their share of economic opportunity, they will not be immune to the allure of this logic as we already see in the various spokesmen for the No campaign on the forthcoming Referendum for constitutional recognition with a Voice to parliament and government.<\/p>\n

    Underpinning the Forums’ reimagining of the future of nature conservation in Australia is the recognition of First Nations Knowledge systems (epistemology). However, to really weave our different knowledge systems together, we must go deeper into ontology<\/em>, our fundamental assumptions and beliefs about the very nature of reality and how we relate to it, experientially.<\/p>\n

    Metaphor of a Tree<\/h3>\n