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|a Better than welfare :
|b work and livelihoods for Indigenous Australians after CDEP /
|c edited by Kirrily Jordan.
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|a Acton, A.C.T. :
|b ANU Press,
|c 2016.
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|a 1 online resource (xviii, 264 pages) :
|b illustrations
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|a text
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|a Research monograph (Australian National University. Centre for Aboriginal Economic Policy Research) ;
|v no. 36
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|a Includes bibliographical references.
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|a Print version record.
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|a List of figures; List of tables; Contributors; Acknowledgements; Preface; From welfare to work, orẅorkẗoẅelfare?; Kirrily Jordan and Jon Altman; Reframed as welfare: CDEP'sÈfallÈfrom favour; Will Sanders; Some statistical context foränalysis of CDEP; Boyd Hunter; Just a jobs program? CDEPëmployment and community development on theÈNSWÈfarÈsouthÈcoast; Kirrily Jordan; Looking for 'real jobs' on the APYÈLands: Intermittent and steady employment in CDEP andöther paid work; Kirrily Jordan.
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|a Work habits and localised authority in Anmatjere CDEPs: Losing good practice through policyändÈprogramÈreviewWill Sanders; Bawinanga and CDEP: The vibrant life, and near death, of a major Aboriginal corporation inÄrnhemÈLand; Jon Altman; Appendix 1: AnnotatedẗimelineöfÈkey developments; Bree Blakeman; Appendix 2: AnnotatedÈbibliography of author publications on CDEP 2005-15; Compiled by Bree Blakeman; CAEPR Research MonographÈSeries; Fig. 3.1 CDEP employment/population ratio, Indigenous males andÈfemales aged 15 and over, 1997-2011.
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|a Fig. 3.2 The proportion of remote IAREs by per cent in CDEP employment in the 2006 census (%)Fig. 3.3 The proportion of remote IAREs by per cent in CDEP employment in the 2011 census (%); Fig. 6.1 Wards of Anmatjere Community Government Council; Fig. 6.2 Pmara Jutunta CDEP Office 2008; Fig. 6.3 Nturiya CDEP Office signs; Fig. 6.4 Four wards and nine service centres of Central Desert Shire; Fig. 6.5 CDEP men's shed at Pmara Jutunta with Central Desert ShireÈsign; Fig. 6.6 Jobfind office in Ti Tree 2009-13; Fig. 6.7 Informal CDEP sign 2013; Fig. 6.8 Map of 60 RJCP regions.
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|a Fig. 6.9 New CDEP/RJCP Activity Centre and Office in Ti Tree 2013Fig. 7.1 A version of the map in Schedule 4 of BACs 'rule book'; Table 3.1 Transition probabilities (15-month) between labour force states, Indigenous males and females (percentage); Table 3.2 Marginal effect of CDEP and other labour force categories onÈselected social and economic outcomes, 2008; Table 3.3 Hypothetical simulations of the 'effect' of loss of 35,000 CDEPÈjobs; Table 3.4 Administrative data on local CDEP schemes at time of 2006 and 2011 census (8Äugust).
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|a Table 3.5 Working-age population (aged 15-64 years) and major mining investment in remote IAREs byÈ2006ÈCDEPëmployment rates in 2006Table 3.6 Labour market outcomes for 15-64-year-olds by Indigenous status, Wallaga Lake, 2006 and 2011; Table 4.1 Labour force characteristics for Bega, Eden and Wallaga Lake Indigenous Locations, Indigenous people aged 15-64 years, 2006ändÈ2011; Table 7.1 Bawinanga annual reporting 1999-2011; Table 7.2 Range of BAC activities by headings reported in narrative annual reports 1999-2000 to 2010-11.
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|a The end of the very long-standing Community Development Employment Projects (CDEP) scheme in 2015 marked a critical juncture in Australian Indigenous policy history. For more than 30 years, CDEP had been among the biggest and most influential programs in the Indigenous affairs portfolio, employing many thousands of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. More recently, it had also become a focus of intense political contestation that culminated in its ultimate demise. This book examines the consequences of its closure for Indigenous people, communities and organisations. The end of CDEP is first situated in its broader historical and political context: the debates over notions of 'self-determination' versus 'mainstreaming' and the enduring influence of concerns about 'passive welfare' and 'mutual obligation'. In this way the focus on CDEP highlights more general trends in Indigenous policymaking, and questions whether the dominant government approach is on the right track. Each chapter takes a different disciplinary approach to this question, variously focusing on the consequences of change for community and economic development, individual work habits and employment outcomes, and institutional capacity within the Indigenous sector. Across the case studies examined, the chapters suggest that the end of CDEP has heralded the emergence of a greater reliance on welfare rather than the increased employment outcomes the government had anticipated. Concluding that CDEP was 'better than welfare' in many ways, the book offers encouragement to policymakers to ensure that future reforms generate livelihood options for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians that are, in turn, better than CDEP.
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|a English.
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|a JSTOR
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|a Community Development Employment Projects (Australia)
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|a Community Development Employment Projects (Australia)
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|a Indigenous peoples
|x Employment
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|a Indigenous peoples
|z Australia
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|a Indigenous peoples
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