Saturday, March 24, 2012

24 Hours in Alice



A quick trip on Thursday to Alice Springs to do a presentation on our proposed Master of Indigenous Policy and Development at the Indigenous Forces at Work Conference being held there. The conference title sums up the practical and resolute tone of the conference.  It’s almost impossible to communicate the richness of such a conference to non-Indigenous outsiders – issues based politics and personalities provide more accessible and simpler ways of engaging with Aboriginal communities.

The response to the presentation was moving. I had particularly wanted to stress for the delegates the matter of validation as an aspect of our proposed Master of Indigenous Policy and Development. In the first instance, a validation of the skills and knowledges accrued by practitioners in the course their work; and following from this, a personal validation for them as individuals whose contribution and skills are usually not affirmed in any concrete and meaningful way.

While I thought it would be a case of airport - conference venue - hotel - airport, Alice still works its magic and strangeness. Where else but Alice Springs casino would you hear the murmur of Aboriginal languages mingled with the electronic chatter of poker machines?  (Provokes interesting reflections on gambling.) Finally the magic: 7.00 am by the hotel pool before flying out:









Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Master of Indigenous Policy and Development

 Where have we been? Pretty much submerged in the development of proposal for a Master of Indigenous Policy and Development targeted in the first instance at potential mature age students, Indigenous and non-Indigenous, employed in the multifarious branches of Indigenous affairs, community support, and development. If we manage to get the proposal through the various stages of evaluation we'll have a course that will enhance the capacity of Indigenous and non-Indigenous students to develop, manage and enact effective Indigenous policy in Australia. A Graduate Certificate will be built into it as well as flexible entry requirements. The vision thing revolves around the prospect of a dozen Indigenous students graduating with a Masters qualification from a sandstone university – an outcome that would really have an impact on the social and policy landscape.

Until now its been driven by will and exhausting work but we’ve picked up supporters and collaborators on the journey – to the point that we are quietly confident we can do it.

(Yes, the lettering is a different colour – the design of the blog will change, leaving the moody greys,  greens and blues behind. The older you get the less inclined you are to fake it.)

RAP. The University of Melbourne had its first Reconciliation Action Plan celebration the other day. Congrats. to everyone mentioned in despatches: