Transcript Slide 1

Understanding ‘health’. The
social & cultural constructs within
living behavior & housing design
Jenine Godwin
Confirmed PhD
Supervisors
Professor Paul Memmott
Associate Professor Andrew Jones
Overview of presentation
Aim of the research
Significance of the research
Methods
Findings
Timeline
Expected limitations
Questions
The primary aim of the
research:
is to explore Aboriginal
housing and how it impacts on
individual and community
health and or well-being
The secondary aims of the
research :
• Examine Aboriginal housing
perspectives, i.e. values, uses,
functions etc, with community
members in Dajarra, Urandangi and
surrounding areas;
• Identify and make evident the
significance of Aboriginal health and
or well-being concepts
Secondary aims cont.
• Highlight the relationship between
Aboriginal perception of health and
housing in these communities; and
• Distinguish Government policy, that
prevents current housing supply
from delivering appropriate health
and or well-being outcomes.
Research Outcomes
• How Aboriginal people use and value
their housing in Dajarra, Urandangi
and surrounding areas;
• What Aboriginal perspectives of what
‘good’ and bad ‘health’ mean in these
communities;
Research outcomes cont.
• Identify critical intersections in the
relationship between health and
housing; and
• Informed policy advice and
negotiation strategies in relation to
‘healthy housing’.
Current housing is not
appropriate
Housing implementation needs to:
• Living: understanding of Aboriginal world
view, lifestyle, culture, language, native title,
economic & political realms
• Delivering: housing services and
organizations which reflects, identifies
culture and specific aspects of social
determinants that impact of Aboriginal
lifestyles
Defining ‘home’
“Home' meant the house, but also
everything that was in it and around
it, as well as the people, and the
sense of satisfaction and
contentment that all these conveyed.
You walk out of the house, but you
always returned home."
(Rybczynski, W 1987:62.)
Aboriginal definition of ‘home,
place, culture….’
“…
a mutual interaction between people and
the environment. Places are
characterized by continual processes of
change including the addition of new
properties of place and the creation of
new places. Displacement and forced
changes to place can be a traumatic and
damaging experience.”
“Place is part of culture, and culture is part of
place”
(Long 2005:63.)
“
Aboriginal housing
• 1967 Referendum – Commonwealth
Government developing policies to
address housing;
• 1972 formation of the Aboriginal Affairs
portfolio
• 1973-75 new approach to housing,
labeled ‘self determination’
“Indigenous housing needs major
repair: Almost one in three houses in
Indigenous communities need
extensive repairs or should be
demolished”…..
(Corbett, K. 2007)
• clinical
•cultural
•services
•case management
•CDEP
•training
•racism
•recruitment
•services
•family
•culture
•land
•services
•funding
•Homeless
•cultural issues
•access
Health
Employment
Aged Care
Housing
ABORIGINAL
WORLDVIEW
Addictive Issues
•gambling
•alcohol
•youth
•illegal
•substances
•prescription
drugs
•chroming
Education
Social Welfare
Mental Health
•diagnosis
•service/access
•stolen
generation
•curriculum
•attendance
•cultural issues
•attendance
•financial
•parenting
•family violence
•youth
•racism
•stolen
generation
RESEARCH SITES
Camooweal
X X
AlpurrurulamX
URANDANGI X
X
DAJARRA
Dajarra & Urandangi communities
experience complex forms of housing
& living options. Hence, they adapt to
what they have (in comparison to most
people’s standards), and they grow up
in an environment assuming the way
they are living is ‘normal’.
Methodology
Required me to be absorbed into
the daily community life
• In Dajarra I rented a one bedroom house from the
Department of Housing house for 12 weeks
• Maintaining the house and watered the yard
• Used the services
• Accepted as a community member i.e. invited to
‘cook ups’, community meetings, visiting elders i.e.
Macie
• Travelling an hour and a half to the Isa (shopping or
appointments) i.e. carpooling
Fieldwork in Dajarra &
Urandangi
• Qualitative data collection – interviews
‘yarning’
• Mapping of the community
• Visual Anthropology
• Participant Action Research
FINDINGS SO FAR
OVERCROWDING
“… each one gets an income
and will have their own little
place to put their food so
nobody puts food out in the
open. Everybody’s that got
food, have got food stored in
their bedroom, but they only
take enough out for them and
their kids rather than feed like,
you know ‘blackfella way’, like
you got a big pot of stew
everybody gets to eat”. (community
member 2008)
DUST/WIND
• Bedourie Dust, from the
south
• Eye & respiratory infections
• Gets into everything i.e.
clothes in drawers, kitchen
utensils, food stored on
benches e.g. bread etc
• No architectural housing
design eliminates dust entering
in the house. The people close
there house up and sometimes
it can be up to 40C+ heat
outside
IMPORTANCE OF
EXTERNAL LIVING
• Outside fire & cooking areas
• These areas are used for social
gatherings ‘cook ups’
• Mainly used in the winter. In
summer people are in with air
conditioners, but most don’t like air
conditioners
• External areas need to be
considered when building a house
with a cover or sitting under and an
open fire area in the middle
Limitations identified
•
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•
•
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Community lores;
Contacts;
‘sorry business’
Men’s & women’s business;
Accessing the community;
Gender roles;
Communication
Bibliography
•
Corbett, K. 2007 “Indigenous housing 'needs major repair”, in The Age,
Melbourne, 20/4/07.
•
Long, S. 2005 “Gidyea Fire: A Study of the transformation and
maintenance of Aboriginal place properties on the Georgina River”, PhD
Thesis, School of Geography, Planning and Architecture, The University of
Queensland, Brisbane, May.
•
Rybczynski.W. 1987. Home: A Short History of an Idea. New York U.S.A.:
Penguin Books. Original edition, 1986.
Questions??
Thank-you