presentation

Living With Nature and the Fitzroy River

Living With Nature and the Fitzroy River

As part of Living Nature 20201, we hosted a conversation about Aboriginal science, the rights of nature and the unprecedented land grab that threatens Australia’s Kimberley region with Indigenouse rights activists, Anne Poelina and film producers, Nick Wrathall. The Kimberley region of North-Western Australia is one of the world’s most ecologically diverse areas, with one of the last untouched coastlines left on Earth. It is also home to 200 remote Aboriginal communities and the oldest surviving culture in the world.

2019 Development Practice Public Lecture

Dr. Anne Poelina at Walmadany, Western Australia

Human Rights and Climate Change Conference and Annual Key Note Address for the School of Social Science Masters of Development Practice.

“… Dr Poelina champions the need to strengthen Indigenous peoples’ capacity to uphold their human, cultural and economic rights from anthropogenic (human-caused) climate change. The National and Aboriginal Heritage Listed Mardoowarra/ Fitzroy River is at a crossroad, with diverse and conflicting visions for its future. Colonialism continues, mining, fossil fuel extraction, unconventional gas, and large-scale irrigated agriculture are invasive development proposals that threaten land, water, food security and the life ways for all Kimberley citizens.

This presentation includes a short film; bridging culture and shared understandings integral to transforming climate change spiralling into climate chaos, continued species extinction, human and environmental injustice. Bringing these threads together, a picture of the Mardoowarra/Fitzroy River emerges as a national treasure for new economies. Economies grounded in collective wisdom; traditional ecological knowledge, customary law with transdisciplinary knowledges; ecological, archaeological, heritage, arts and cultural values. This aligned with the rights of nature as the solutions for planetary health and wellbeing through an earth-centred regional governance provides the hope necessary to re-imagine the future now!”

Read more at The University of Queensland website.

Read more at the ‘Human Rights and Climate Change’ Conference website

View details at Eventbrite