Social engineering and Indigenous settlement: policy and demography in remote Australia. TAYLOR, J. Australian Aboriginal Studies, 2009/1:4–15, 2009.
Social engineering and Indigenous settlement: policy and demography in remote Australia [link]Paper  abstract   bibtex   
In recent years neo-liberals have argued that government support for remote Aboriginal communities contributes to social pathology and that unhindered market engagement involving labour mobility provides the only solution. This has raised questions about the viability of remote Aboriginal settlements. While the extreme view is to withdraw services altogether, at the very least selective migration should be encouraged. Since the analytical tools are available, one test of the integrity of such ideas is to consider their likely demographic consequences. Accordingly, this paper provides empirically based speculation about the possible implications for Aboriginal population distribution and demographic composition in remote areas had the advice of neo-liberal commentators and initial labour market reforms of the Northern Territory Emergency Response been fully implemented. The scenarios presented are heuristic only but they reveal a potential for substantial demographic and social upheaval.
@article{taylor_social_2009,
	series = {Oceania / {Pacific}},
	title = {Social engineering and {Indigenous} settlement: policy and demography in remote {Australia}},
	volume = {2009/1},
	url = {https://search.informit.org/doi/abs/10.3316/ielapa.981187354042923},
	abstract = {In recent years neo-liberals have argued that government support for remote Aboriginal communities contributes to social pathology and that unhindered market engagement involving labour mobility provides the only solution. This has raised questions about the viability of remote Aboriginal settlements. While the extreme view is to withdraw services altogether, at the very least selective migration should be encouraged. Since the analytical tools are available, one test of the integrity of such ideas is to consider their likely demographic consequences. Accordingly, this paper provides empirically based speculation about the possible implications for Aboriginal population distribution and demographic composition in remote areas had the advice of neo-liberal commentators and initial labour market reforms of the Northern Territory Emergency Response been fully implemented. The scenarios presented are heuristic only but they reveal a potential for substantial demographic and social upheaval.},
	language = {en},
	journal = {Australian Aboriginal Studies},
	author = {TAYLOR, John},
	year = {2009},
	keywords = {Region: Oceania / Pacific, Language: English, Country: Australia},
	pages = {4--15},
	file = {TAYLOR - 2009 - Social engineering and Indigenous settlement Poli.pdf:/Users/bastien/Zotero/storage/JLYN63AR/TAYLOR - 2009 - Social engineering and Indigenous settlement Poli.pdf:application/pdf},
}

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