Alison Lullfitz, Shandell Cummings, Jessikah Woods, Ursula Rodrigues, Susannah Cramp, Stephen D. Hopper
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Collaborating (Not Consulting) to Care for Country: Kwodjet Goorliny Symposium, Kinjaarliny/Albany, Western Australia, May 2024
The Kwodjet Goorliny symposium in Kinjaarliny/Albany, Western Australia, Menang/Merningar Boodja was attended by 191 people in May 2024. The three-day symposium prioritised Indigenous voices and brought together all collaborators on the two-way science research project, Walking Together, as well as other cross-cultural ecology researchers, educators and practitioners from across Australia. Presenters included Noongar, Martu, Gamilaroi, Kaurareg and Yamaji traditional custodians, Indigenous rangers and representatives of research, education, health, local government, emergency management, conservation, Native Title and not-for-profit organisations. It was an opportunity to learn from and inspire one another, to celebrate achievements, and to collectively workshop next steps in cross-cultural approaches to care for Country, culture and people. Strong themes of the workshop were that successful two-way caring for Country requires robust collaborative relationships and is usually highly place-based in nature, neither of which are well-supported by short-term and scarce funding programmes. New approaches to supporting Indigenous-led, collaborative conservation work are required.
期刊介绍:
Ecological Management & Restoration is a peer-reviewed journal with the dual aims of (i) reporting the latest science to assist ecologically appropriate management and restoration actions and (ii) providing a forum for reporting on these actions. Guided by an editorial board made up of researchers and practitioners, EMR seeks features, topical opinion pieces, research reports, short notes and project summaries applicable to Australasian ecosystems to encourage more regionally-appropriate management. Where relevant, contributions should draw on international science and practice and highlight any relevance to the global challenge of integrating biodiversity conservation in a rapidly changing world.
Topic areas:
Improved management and restoration of plant communities, fauna and habitat; coastal, marine and riparian zones; restoration ethics and philosophy; planning; monitoring and assessment; policy and legislation; landscape pattern and design; integrated ecosystems management; socio-economic issues and solutions; techniques and methodology; threatened species; genetic issues; indigenous land management; weeds and feral animal control; landscape arts and aesthetics; education and communication; community involvement.