Accounting for Yolŋu ranger work in the Dhimurru Indigenous Protected Area, Australia

Over the past decade, there has been increased international interest in understanding and recognizing the contribution of Indigenous natural and cultural resource management, including Indigenous ranger work, to the sustainable management of social-ecological systems. In Australia, Indigenous range...

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Autores principales: Margaret L. Ayre, Djalinda Yunupingu, Jonathan Wearne, Cheryl O'Dwyer, Tanya Vernes, Mandaka Marika
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Publicado: Resilience Alliance 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/a0c05dfb53a74c5ab5899cddfb6578f8
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:a0c05dfb53a74c5ab5899cddfb6578f82021-12-02T14:21:41ZAccounting for Yolŋu ranger work in the Dhimurru Indigenous Protected Area, Australia1708-308710.5751/ES-12149-260124https://doaj.org/article/a0c05dfb53a74c5ab5899cddfb6578f82021-03-01T00:00:00Zhttps://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol26/iss1/art24/https://doaj.org/toc/1708-3087Over the past decade, there has been increased international interest in understanding and recognizing the contribution of Indigenous natural and cultural resource management, including Indigenous ranger work, to the sustainable management of social-ecological systems. In Australia, Indigenous rangers are responsible for managing land and seas that represent approximately 44% of the national protected area estate. Governments and other coinvestors seek to evaluate this ranger work and its contribution to biodiversity conservation and other public goods. However, current monitoring and evaluation approaches are based in conceptions of value and benefits and do not capture the full range of contributions and meanings associated with this work. We present an empirical case study from northern Australia in which we explore how to properly account for the full complexity and richness of Indigenous ranger work. We demonstrate that the work of being an Indigenous ranger at a Yolŋu (Indigenous people of Northeast Arnhem Land) land and sea management organization, (the Dhimurru Aboriginal Corporation or Dhimurru), can be understood as three sets of knowledge practices: the practices of "knowing and being known by Yolŋu country;" the practices of "mobilizing the Dhimurru Vision Statement;" and, the practices of "being ralpa" (Ralpa is a Yolŋu concept that means being willing to work and prepared to take on leadership responsibilities.) We contend that these knowledge practices represent criteria for judging the effectiveness of Yolŋu ranger work. The Dhimurru knowledge community of senior Yolŋu landowners and their collaborators, judge the effectiveness of Yolŋu ranger work based on whether Yolŋu rangers demonstrate these practices. By integrating such criteria into Dhimurru's formal monitoring and evaluation processes endorsed by its government funding partners, Dhimurru can more effectively and fully demonstrate the contribution of Yolŋu rangers to the Yolŋu vision for ecologically and culturally sustainable management of the Dhimurru Indigenous Protected Area in the Northern Territory as part of Australia's national conservation estate.Margaret L. AyreDjalinda YunupinguJonathan WearneCheryl O'DwyerTanya VernesMandaka MarikaResilience Alliancearticleaccountabilityindigenous (yol&#331u) rangersknowledge practicesmonitoring and evaluationprotected area managementBiology (General)QH301-705.5EcologyQH540-549.5ENEcology and Society, Vol 26, Iss 1, p 24 (2021)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic accountability
indigenous (yol&#331
u) rangers
knowledge practices
monitoring and evaluation
protected area management
Biology (General)
QH301-705.5
Ecology
QH540-549.5
spellingShingle accountability
indigenous (yol&#331
u) rangers
knowledge practices
monitoring and evaluation
protected area management
Biology (General)
QH301-705.5
Ecology
QH540-549.5
Margaret L. Ayre
Djalinda Yunupingu
Jonathan Wearne
Cheryl O'Dwyer
Tanya Vernes
Mandaka Marika
Accounting for Yolŋu ranger work in the Dhimurru Indigenous Protected Area, Australia
description Over the past decade, there has been increased international interest in understanding and recognizing the contribution of Indigenous natural and cultural resource management, including Indigenous ranger work, to the sustainable management of social-ecological systems. In Australia, Indigenous rangers are responsible for managing land and seas that represent approximately 44% of the national protected area estate. Governments and other coinvestors seek to evaluate this ranger work and its contribution to biodiversity conservation and other public goods. However, current monitoring and evaluation approaches are based in conceptions of value and benefits and do not capture the full range of contributions and meanings associated with this work. We present an empirical case study from northern Australia in which we explore how to properly account for the full complexity and richness of Indigenous ranger work. We demonstrate that the work of being an Indigenous ranger at a Yolŋu (Indigenous people of Northeast Arnhem Land) land and sea management organization, (the Dhimurru Aboriginal Corporation or Dhimurru), can be understood as three sets of knowledge practices: the practices of "knowing and being known by Yolŋu country;" the practices of "mobilizing the Dhimurru Vision Statement;" and, the practices of "being ralpa" (Ralpa is a Yolŋu concept that means being willing to work and prepared to take on leadership responsibilities.) We contend that these knowledge practices represent criteria for judging the effectiveness of Yolŋu ranger work. The Dhimurru knowledge community of senior Yolŋu landowners and their collaborators, judge the effectiveness of Yolŋu ranger work based on whether Yolŋu rangers demonstrate these practices. By integrating such criteria into Dhimurru's formal monitoring and evaluation processes endorsed by its government funding partners, Dhimurru can more effectively and fully demonstrate the contribution of Yolŋu rangers to the Yolŋu vision for ecologically and culturally sustainable management of the Dhimurru Indigenous Protected Area in the Northern Territory as part of Australia's national conservation estate.
format article
author Margaret L. Ayre
Djalinda Yunupingu
Jonathan Wearne
Cheryl O'Dwyer
Tanya Vernes
Mandaka Marika
author_facet Margaret L. Ayre
Djalinda Yunupingu
Jonathan Wearne
Cheryl O'Dwyer
Tanya Vernes
Mandaka Marika
author_sort Margaret L. Ayre
title Accounting for Yolŋu ranger work in the Dhimurru Indigenous Protected Area, Australia
title_short Accounting for Yolŋu ranger work in the Dhimurru Indigenous Protected Area, Australia
title_full Accounting for Yolŋu ranger work in the Dhimurru Indigenous Protected Area, Australia
title_fullStr Accounting for Yolŋu ranger work in the Dhimurru Indigenous Protected Area, Australia
title_full_unstemmed Accounting for Yolŋu ranger work in the Dhimurru Indigenous Protected Area, Australia
title_sort accounting for yolŋu ranger work in the dhimurru indigenous protected area, australia
publisher Resilience Alliance
publishDate 2021
url https://doaj.org/article/a0c05dfb53a74c5ab5899cddfb6578f8
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