Making a difference 2020-2021

HEALING LAND AND PEOPLE WITH BIODIVERSITY RESEARCH ADiscovery Indigenous research project led byMr Darryl Kickett fromCurtin University's School of Media, Creative Arts and Social Inquiry is advancing reconciliation in Australia by bringing together scientific expertise, history and Indigenous cultural knowledge to conserve the country’s precious biodiversity. The project titled Healing Land, Healing People: Novel Nyungar Perspectives includes fellowCurtin researchers Professor Anna Haebich and Dr Carol Dowling, as well as Professor Stephen Hopper fromThe University ofWestern Australia and Dr Tiffany Shellam fromDeakin University. The unique research project combines expertise in cultural healing, cross-cultural knowledge of biodiversity on old and young landscapes, archival collections-based historical studies, and oral histories explored on country with Nyungar people and along songlines in southwest Australia. Darryl Kickett has been instigating opportunities for A boriginal leaders, communities, and governments to work together for many years while based at Curtin University’s Centre for Aboriginal Studies. In this project Nyungar Elders and family groups are contributing historical knowledge about howthe study area, the Dryandra Woodlands, south of Perth, has been used for thousands of years. By combining this knowledge with scientific assessments, the research team is working to heal the land, by slowing the decline in biodiversity in the woodlands and the surrounding area. The collaboration also provides a model opportunity to embrace Indigenous Elders as a solution to protecting biodiversity, and to advance the progress of reconciliation between Nyungar people, non-Indigenous community members and land.

57

FIRST AUSTRALIANS’ COLLABORATIONS AND KNOWLEDGES

Made with FlippingBook Converter PDF to HTML5