Book launch: Experiments in self-determination

Outstations, which dramatically increased in numbers in the 1970s, are small, decentralised and relatively permanent communities of kin established by Aboriginal people on land that has social, cultural or economic significance to them. In 2015 they yet again came under attack, this time as an expensive lifestyle choice that can no longer be supported by state governments.
Yet outstations are the original, and most striking, manifestation of remote-area Aboriginal people’s aspirations for self-determination, and of the life projects by which they seek, and have sought, autonomy in deciding the meaning of their life independently of projects promoted by the state and market. They are not simply projects of isolation from outside influences, as they have sometimes been characterised, but attempts by people to take control of the course of their lives.
In the sometimes acrimonious debates about outstations, the lived experiences, motivations and histories of existing communities are missing. For this reason, Professors Nicolas Peterson and Fred Myers invited a number of anthropological witnesses to the early period in which outstations gained a purchase in remote Australia to provide accounts of what these communities were like, and what their residents’ aspirations and experiences were. Experiments in self-determination: Histories of the outstation movement in Australia comprises these accounts.
Professors Peterson and Myers hope that these closer-to-the-ground accounts provide insight into, and understanding of, what Indigenous aspirations were in the establishment and organisation of these communities.
Experiments in self-determination: Histories of the outstation movement in Australia is published by ANU Press.
Location
Sir Roland Wilson building
Speaker
- Mark Dreyfus QC MP
- Professor Nicolas Peterson
Contact
- Professor Nicolas Peterson02 6125 4727