Archive for November, 2009

How about Maori and Pakeha – the healing 'both-and' approach?

November 27, 2009

“Maori vs Pakeha – Goff’s warning
NZ Herald Friday Nov 27, 2009
By Patrick Gower

Labour leader Phil Goff has re-opened the political warfare over the foreshore and seabed law, saying the Government’s plan to repeal it will divide the country again.

Mr Goff yesterday changed Labour’s position on the law, saying it was working well the way it was now, and repeal would make “wounds fester”.

National and the Maori Party have indicated they will repeal the law after reviewing it as part of their governing agreement.”

full story

http://msn.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10611979&ref=rss

"New National Congress of Australia's First Peoples announced"

November 23, 2009

from Australian Human Rights Commission:

“Tom Calma, Chair of the Steering Committee charged with establishing the new national Indigenous representative body, has today announced that the new organisation will be called the National Congress of Australia’s First Peoples.

Commissioner Calma, who has convened the independent Indigenous Steering Committee since December last year, announced the name after the federal Government confirmed it had accepted the recommendations of the Committee’s report, Our future in our hands, and had agreed to initial funding of the organisation until December 2013.

“Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples have been without a representative voice for too long,” Commissioner Calma said.

“This is a critical moment in forging a new relationship with the Australian Government and I thank them for honouring their commitment to establish the new representative body in this term of government.”

Commissioner Calma said that setting up the new National Congress of Australia’s First Peoples was a monumental task that would require a development phase until the end of 2010.

“The Steering Committee has continued to work in a voluntary capacity on the institutional arrangements for the organisation in recent months and will continue to do so for the coming months. I thank them for their tireless dedication and personal commitment,” Commissioner Calma said.

The Steering Committee continues to focus on:

establishing the Ethics Council for the organisation;
selecting and appointing the interim National Executive to lead the organisation through the development phase;
completing the preparatory work required to incorporate the company, including developing the constitution and the rules of the organisation in order to lodge it with ASIC; and
finalising selection documentation and the duty statement for the Chief Executive Officer, with the recruitment process for the CEO to commence in the coming weeks.

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Child abuse by the State – Western Australian style

November 20, 2009

“West Australian police will withdraw charges against a 12-year-old boy who appeared in court yesterday for receiving an allegedly stolen Freddo frog.

The chocolate was allegedly shoplifted by the boy’s friend from a Coles supermarket in Northam, about 100 kilometres from Perth.

Police initially stood by its decision to press on with the case after a hearing in Northam Children’s Court yesterday.

The decision brought outrage from the Aboriginal Legal Service and the boy’s lawyer, Peter Collins.

But this morning, Commissioner Karl O’Callaghan told ABC Radio he now wanted the charges withdrawn and referred to the state’s juvenile justice team.

“They will not actually be dropped, but sent to the state’s Juvenile Justice Team,” Mr O’Callaghan said.”

full story from Sydney Morning Herald
http://www.smh.com.au/national/freddo-frog-meltdown-police-chief-wants-charge-with-drawn-against-boy-12-20091117-ijph.html

Vote for 'leaders' to tackle food crisis – AVAAZ petition

November 16, 2009

Hello,

I’ve just signed a petition urging world leaders to make good on their promises to tackle the world food crisis by delivering a $20 billion agriculture and food security package for developing countries.

Next week’s World Food Summit in Rome is our best chance to hold world leaders to their minimum commitments and push them to take significant action to tackle global hunger. If enough of us sign this petition, our global call will be heard and key actions could be agreed during the summit.

Click here to sign the petition:

http://www.avaaz.org/en/world_hunger_pledges/98.php?

Thanks!

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Message to PM Rudd – climate change – world suffering from too much yang – needs counterbalancing yin

November 13, 2009

Dear Prime Minister Rudd

A healing approach is required to restore balance to our planet’s climate, which is presently suffering from a curious condition – and running a temperature.

Part of the problem is due to the attempt of one side of our Being to dominate the other side. Too much yang! We think we need a lot of power – when what we really need to learn is about respectful relating.

Changing our Ways – by bringing yin and yang back into dynamic balance – is a key part of the healing solution for bringing the temperature back to where it should be for overall well-being.

Yin is cool.

To lead in the 21st century is to find the healing path – to recognise the place of yin in our lives – and to put it into our everyday practice.

In order to encourage others to reduce their impacts on the world’s climate, we have to change our ways (from those of the last two centuries) to show them how it can be done.

Yours truly

Bruce Reyburn
admin@songlines.org.au

Send your healing message to PM Rudd via Avaaz.org
http://www.avaaz.org/en/australia_lead_on_climate/?cl=368866032&v=4464

Australasian World Music Expo 2009 – Thursday 19 – Sunday 22 November 2009.

November 13, 2009

Hi there,

Just one week to go before Melbourne once again comes alive with the vibrant celebration of world, roots and Indigenous music for the Australasian World Music Expo 2009.

In it’s second year, AWME is set to take over the city streets for 3 days and nights of non-stop music from the region and beyond offering music fans one of the most eclectic public festival programs this country has to offer.

AWME 2009 LINE UP INCLUDES :: BLUE KING BROWN • ARCHIE ROACH • TOGUNA (Reunion Islands/France) • TRUE LIVE • OKA • BATUCADA SOUND MACHINE (New Zealand) • DUBMARINE • THE RED EYES with MAD PROFESSOR (UK) • DJAN DJAN (Mamadou Diabate, Bobby Singh, Jeff Lang) • SHAKURA STRINGBAND (Vanuatu) • THE LAST KINECTION • DYA SINGH (India/Australia) • MIHIRANGI (New Zealand/Australia) • THE PUBLIC OPINION AFRO ORCHESTRA featuring TUMI (South Africa) • THE PIGRAM BROTHERS • LITTLE BUSHMAN (NZ) • GRACE BARBÉ (Seychelles/Australia) • EMMA DONOVAN • NOREUM MACHI (South Korea) • MOAB STRINGBAND (Papua New Guinea) • TAMA WAIPARA (New Zealand) • SAN LAZARO • HEARTICAL HIFI OUTERNATIONAL • RICHARD MOGU (Papua New Guinea) • NARASIRATO PAN PIPERS (Solomon Islands) • KAMERUNGA • STIFF GINS • CHANT DOWN SOUND • RHOMBUS (New Zealand) • YKSON (New Caledonia) • ZULYA AND THE CHILDREN OF THE UNDERGROUND • GROUNDSWELL (Deline Briscoe, Radical Son, The Medics) • AFRO DIZZI ACT • WAY OUT WEST • TABURA (West Papua) • LAYA FILM PROJECT (India) • KARTICK & GOTAM (India/Israel) • SISTA ITATIONS feat. MC RIFRAPH • ENNIO STYLES • MR FISH • CHOOKY DANCERS • INJINOO DANCERS • SHELLIE MORRIS • VALANGHA KHOZA (South Africa/Australia) • RIA SOEMARDJO (Indonesia/Australia) • DJ DAMON (aka The Nomad) (New Zealand) PLUS MORE

For a downloadable program and more information about this years Australasian World Music Expo please visit www.awme.com.au

ALL TICKETS ON SALE NOW !

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2009 AMA Indigenous Health Report Card – "The Health of Indigenous Males Building Capacity, Securing the Future"

November 12, 2009

Lifted from http://www.ama.com.au/node/5114

“10 November 2009 – 3:40pm

The AMA Indigenous Health Report Card 2009 collates the tragic facts of the health of Indigenous males, including:

An Indigenous boy born during 2005-2007 can expect to die at age 67, nearly six years earlier than an Indigenous girl, and 11.5 years earlier than a non-Indigenous boy born in the same period;

Between 2005 and 2007, Indigenous boys were 1.4 times more likely to die in the first year of their lives than Indigenous girls, and nearly twice as likely to die as other infants in the general population;

Between 2005 and 2007, Indigenous men died at higher rates than non-Indigenous men at all ages;
Cardiovascular disease (including heart disease and stroke) was the leading cause of preventable death among Indigenous men, and accounted for 27 per cent of deaths between 2002 and 2005;

Indigenous men had significantly higher levels of hospitalisation, at a standardised rate of 876 per 1,000 in 2007-08 compared with 358 per 1,000 for non-Indigenous males;

In 2004-06, Indigenous males were more than twice as likely to be hospitalised for mental health and behavioural disorders than non-Indigenous males;

In 2002, more than one-quarter of Indigenous males 15 years and over reported that they had been a victim of threatened or actual violence in the previous 12 months; and

The WA Aboriginal child health survey reported that 12 per cent of Indigenous males aged 12-17 years had thought about ending their lives in the previous 12 months, and four per cent had attempted to do so in this period.

The Report Card details AMA proposals to improve the health of Indigenous males through primary health care services and workforce, quality care in all Australian health services, local community capacity building, health promotion and chronic disease prevention, strategies to keep Indigenous males out of prison, a focus on social and emotional wellbeing, and promotion of economic engagement and entrepreneurial opportunities.

The “Good News and Best Practice 2009″ insert to the Report Card also showcases success stories such as the Danila Dilba Men’s Clinic in Darwin, the ‘I’m an Aboriginal Dad’ support program (Vic), The Clontarf Foundation (WA), Panyappi Indigenous Youth Mentoring Program (SA), The Uncle Nephew Program, and Social Inclusion SA – Aboriginal Boys and Young Men’s Program.

The AMA acknowledges the assistance and input of the National Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisations (NACCHO) and the Australian Indigenous Doctors’ Association (AIDA) in the production of this Report Card.

A detailed description of data relating to the health of Indigenous males is available at the Australian Indigenous HealthInfonet at http://www.healthinfonet.ecu.edu.au/male_review

Download report:
http://www.ama.com.au/system/files/node/5114/AMA+Indigenous+Health+Report+Card+2009.pdf

Pacific Trade Justice Speaking Tour, 16-19 Nov. 2009

November 12, 2009

From Aidwatch:

“The Australian government has been pushing for greater regional economic integration in the Pacific islands, and promoting a regional trade agreement known as PACER-Plus. Join us to hear from two leading campaigners for trade justice in the Pacific about the implications of PACER-Plus on Pacific Island economies and communities.”

The Pacific Trade Justice Speaking Tour will visit Melbourne (16 Nov), Canberra (17 Nov) and Sydney (19 Nov).

For details about the tour see: http://www.aidwatch.org.au/events/pacific-trade-justice-speaking-tour or contact Gary Lee on (02) 9557 8944; email: gary@aidwatch.org.au

For more information on PACER-Plus see: http://www.aidwatch.org.au/publications/pacer-plus-resources

"Failing to address Indigenous hearing health damages lives"

November 11, 2009

Human Rights Australia media release:

As part of the Senate Community Affairs Committee Inquiry into Hearing Health in Australia, the Australian Race and Disability Discrimination Commissioner, Graeme Innes, urged the Australian Government to increase action against the disproportionately high incidence of hearing impairment and deafness among Indigenous peoples.

In making the Australian Human Rights Commission’s submission to the inquiry, Commissioner Innes said, “The disproportionate incidence of hearing impairment and deafness in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, compared to the general community, is both symptomatic of the disadvantage they face and has grave repercussions, in terms of health and socio-economic experience, throughout their lives”.

Commissioner Innes said the statistics spoke for themselves.

The prevalence of hearing conditions in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children up to three years of age was three times higher than for non-Indigenous children and deafness in children aged up to 14 was five times higher. While the World Health Organization states that a greater than 4% prevalence of Chronic Suppurative Otitis Media (CSOM) is a major public health problem, up to 40% of Indigenous children in remote areas suffer from it. Additionally, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children and young adults between the ages of two and 20 years experience an average of 32 weeks of middle ear disease, compared with two weeks for non-Indigenous children and young adults.

The Productivity Commission recently noted that such high rates of recurring ear infections are associated with poverty, crowded housing conditions, inadequate access to clean water and functional sewerage systems, nutritional problems and access to health care.

“These figures are extremely concerning,” said Commissioner Innes. “When you consider that the very early childhood years are also the most critical development period for speech and language development (and thus communication, learning, and social and emotional development), it is not surprising to find that unaddressed hearing problems often become tied to resultant broader socio-economic disadvantage for these individuals.”

Commissioner Innes acknowledged that elements of the current government policy framework can positively contribute to addressing hearing impairment and deafness in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities.

However, he said the Commission’s submission recommends that the Government implement measures that ensure adequate provision of accessible, affordable and culturally appropriate services; address socio-economic issues such as housing, diet and education; address race and disability discrimination issues; and support further research in Indigenous hearing and communication.

Claude Levi-Strauss – dead at 100!

November 5, 2009

One of the greatest minds of the twentieth century, Claude Levi-Strauss, passed from this life on 30 October, 2009, having lived for 100 years.

Levi-Strauss’s long and productive life seems a fitting reward for his outstanding contribution to new ways of understanding across cultural boundaries.

His work as an anthropological-thinker covered a wide range of areas, including how kinship transcends biology (“The Elementary Structures of Kinship”); demolishing the illusion ‘totemism’ (so close to the hearts of modern Australian anthropologists); demonstrations of how the human mind worked (the poorly translated title “The Savage Mind”) by the use of signs; how the ‘non-sense’ of myth had its own logic (his work on South and North American mythology) and much more.

A vitally important part of his work made it impossible for the old stereotypes of non-Western peoples to be taken seriously. (See also his UNESCO lectures on “race” and culture.)

While Levi-Strauss’s commitment to a modern idea of science makes him a man of his time, so much of his own work took him out of those times, and allowed many others to follow paths he marked out during trailblazing explorations which reached into the rarest parts of our noosphere.

Those post-modernists and post-structuralists who prefer to dismiss his work without taking the effort to read it miss out on one of the real intellectual treats of the twentieth century – by which we may come into contact with the thinking of other peoples.

Thank you Professor Levi-Strauss. It will take us some time to digest all the ‘goods for thinking’ you provided us with.

for more see:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Levi-Strauss


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