Indigenous Land and Sea Management Programs (ILSMPs) Enhance the Wellbeing of Indigenous Australians
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Case Study Areas
2.2. W-IE Method and Data Collection
- We asked individuals to review each of the 26 (wellbeing) factor cards and sort them into two separate groups—those that were not important to their own wellbeing and those that were. Having set aside the unimportant factors, we asked people to select the six factors that were deemed to be the most important to their own personal wellbeing. For each individual, we thus had three groups of factors: those deemed unimportant, a ‘middle’ group, and the most important.
- We asked individuals to focus on the six factors that were selected as most important to their wellbeing and to rate the importance of those core factors on the scale from 1 to 10 (see boxes in Figure 3). Hence, we obtained information on both how many individuals within our sample selected a factor as being of most importance, and (for selected factors) how important that factors is. This allowed us to estimate the ‘Overall Importance’ of factor(s), as the % of respondents selecting a factor multiplied by mean importance assigned by those who selected (and thus rated) the factor.
- We also asked individuals to tell us how satisfied they were with each core factor, both ‘now’ (at the time of the ‘yarn-up’) and 5 years previously (before the Indigenous Land and Sea management occurred) (see boxes in Figure 3). Subtracting one satisfaction score from the other allowed us to generate a quantitative measure of ‘Size of change’.
- We multiplied estimates of the change in satisfaction (step 3) by estimates of the overall importance scores (step 2) to estimate the significance of perceived change to wellbeing (Wellbeing impact change score).
- Whenever a change was noted, respondents were asked what had happened to cause the change. We were careful not to ‘lead the witness’—and did not explicitly ask if they perceived a link to ILSMPs. Responses to this open-ended question were then coded, explicitly noting whether the respondent had attributed changes to, or associated changes with, native title or ILSMPs (see ellipse in Figure 3)—termed: ‘Link to ILSMPs’. The ‘strength’ of the link between any individual factor and ILSMPs was measured by calculating the percentages of respondents who had selected a factor as important, who also linked observed changes in satisfaction with that factor to an ILSMP. Combining qualitative responses with quantitative scores (step 4) thus provides inferential information about the extent to which a program (in this case ILSMPs) is seen as having impacted ‘important factors’—termed: program’s Impact.
2.3. Conceptualising Wellbeing and the Impact that ILSMPs Have on Overall Wellbeing
- (1)
- Added all importance scores for factors within that domain, and then divided through by the sum of all overall importance scores. This provides information about the relative importance of each domain to overall wellbeing (Domain Importance); and
- (2)
- Added the number of times that responses to our open-ended questions about the perceived causes of observed change to each included factor was linked to ILSMPs, and then divided through by the sum of all ILSMP links. This provides information about the relative ‘impact’ of ILSMPs on each domain (ILSMP impact on Domain).
3. Results
3.1. Wellbeing Impact Evaluation (W-IE)
3.2. Conceptualisation of Wellbeing Domains and the Impact that ILSMPs Have on those Domains
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Wellbeing Factor | Referred to in the Paper as |
---|---|
Having enough power to influence decisions that affect my life (e.g., decisions about housing, how to spend money, etc.) | Power to influence |
Being a role model or having role models in the community | Role model |
Having the legal left to use/access country | Legal left to country |
Knowing that country is being looked after the left way | Country looked after |
Being out on country (for any reason) | Being on country |
Obtaining legal protection for places, knowledge or practices with important cultural value | Legal protection |
Feeling strong in our culture | Strong in culture |
Making sure language is not ‘lost’ (spoken regularly and/or written down) | Language |
Sharing knowledge (traditional and new) within and outside community | Sharing knowledge |
Having houses that are in good condition and not overcrowded | Housing |
Having good quality schools and training centers close by | Schools |
Having good quality clinics and hospitals close by | Health centres |
Reducing how much I use grog, smokes or gunja | Social ills |
Feeling good and strong in my body and mind | Strong person |
Knowing my family are feeling good and strong in their bodies and mind | Strong family |
Knowing that people in our community feel good about each other and work together to help when needed | Community spirit |
Knowing that my community is a safe place for me and my loved ones | Safe community |
Knowing that people who behave outside the law (or Aboriginal law) are punished | Law enforced |
Having a paid job | Paid job |
Enjoying the work I do (paid or unpaid) | Work satisfaction |
Having more money | More money |
Having my own business | Own business |
Being able to save money for big purchases (e.g., car or house) | More saving |
Having jobs available in my local community | Local jobs |
Being able to use a mobile phone and internet in our community and on country | ICT (Information and Communications Technology) |
Consuming traditional foods | Bush tucker |
Wellbeing Factor | Overall Importance | Size of Change in Satisfaction | Wellbeing Impact Change Score |
---|---|---|---|
Country looked after | 262 | 1.73 | 453 |
Schools | 310 | 1.33 | 412 |
Legal right to country | 235 | 1.69 | 397 |
ICT | 137 | 2.67 | 366 |
Role model | 252 | 1.35 | 340 |
Legal protection | 184 | 1.55 | 285 |
Power to influence | 158 | 1.79 | 283 |
Language | 329 | 0.73 | 240 |
Social ills | 101 | −1.89 | −191 |
Strong family | 269 | 0.66 | 177 |
Paid job | 274 | 0.59 | 161 |
Strong in culture | 268 | 0.6 | 161 |
Strong person | 225 | 0.63 | 142 |
Local jobs | 288 | −0.48 | −138 |
Work satisfaction | 122 | 1.02 | 124 |
Own business | 68 | 1.69 | 115 |
Housing | 280 | 0.35 | 98 |
Being on country | 167 | 0.53 | 88 |
Health centres | 362 | 0.23 | 83 |
Sharing knowledge | 206 | 0.4 | 82 |
More saving | 91 | 0.87 | 79 |
Safe community | 303 | 0.23 | 69 |
Community spirit | 204 | 0.32 | 65 |
Bush tucker 1 | 224 | −0.26 | −58 |
Law enforced | 89 | −0.51 | −45 |
More money | 82 | 0.41 | 33 |
Domain 1: Country and Culture | Domain 2: Community and Society | Domain 3: Individual and Economy |
---|---|---|
Being on country (0.692) | Paid job (0.627) | ICT (0.718) |
Legal protection (0.659) | Safe community (0.578) | More money (0.654) |
Strong in culture (0.566) | Strong person (0.505) | Law enforced (0.564) |
Legal right to country (0.563) | Work satisfaction (0.482) | Housing (0.525) |
Language (0.558) | Schools (0.477) | Bush Tucker (0.492) |
Country looked after (0.549) | Strong family (0.394) | Own business (0.445) |
Sharing knowledge (0.544) | Local jobs (0.382) | More savings (0.420) |
Health centres (−0.397) | Community spirit (0.338) | |
Role model (0.295) | ||
Social ills (0.288) | ||
Power to influence (0.166) |
Domain 1: Country and Culture | No. Links | Domain 2: Community and Society | No. Links | Domain 3: Individual and Economy | No. Links |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
31% of Overall Importance | 52% of Overall Importance | 17% of Overall Importance | |||
Country looked after | 19 | Community spirit | 6 | Law enforced | 1 |
Legal right to country | 14 | Paid job | 4 | Housing | 1 |
Legal protection | 11 | Power to influence | 4 | Bush Tucker | 1 |
Sharing knowledge | 7 | Local jobs | 3 | ICT | |
Language | 5 | Role model | 2 | More money | |
Strong in culture | 5 | Strong family | 2 | More savings | |
Being on country | 4 | Strong person | Own business | ||
Health centres | Safe community | ||||
Work satisfaction | |||||
Schools | |||||
Social ills | |||||
Total links | 65 | Total links | 21 | Total links | 3 |
% of all links made | 73 | % of all links made | 23 | % of all links made | 4 |
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Share and Cite
Larson, S.; Stoeckl, N.; Jarvis, D.; Addison, J.; Grainger, D.; Watkin Lui, F.; Walalakoo Aboriginal Corporation; Bunuba Dawangarri Aboriginal Corporation RNTBC; Ewamian Aboriginal Corporation RNTBC; Yanunijarra Aboriginal Corporation RNTBC. Indigenous Land and Sea Management Programs (ILSMPs) Enhance the Wellbeing of Indigenous Australians. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 125. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17010125
Larson S, Stoeckl N, Jarvis D, Addison J, Grainger D, Watkin Lui F, Walalakoo Aboriginal Corporation, Bunuba Dawangarri Aboriginal Corporation RNTBC, Ewamian Aboriginal Corporation RNTBC, Yanunijarra Aboriginal Corporation RNTBC. Indigenous Land and Sea Management Programs (ILSMPs) Enhance the Wellbeing of Indigenous Australians. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2020; 17(1):125. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17010125
Chicago/Turabian StyleLarson, Silva, Natalie Stoeckl, Diane Jarvis, Jane Addison, Daniel Grainger, Felecia Watkin Lui, Walalakoo Aboriginal Corporation, Bunuba Dawangarri Aboriginal Corporation RNTBC, Ewamian Aboriginal Corporation RNTBC, and Yanunijarra Aboriginal Corporation RNTBC. 2020. "Indigenous Land and Sea Management Programs (ILSMPs) Enhance the Wellbeing of Indigenous Australians" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 17, no. 1: 125. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17010125
APA StyleLarson, S., Stoeckl, N., Jarvis, D., Addison, J., Grainger, D., Watkin Lui, F., Walalakoo Aboriginal Corporation, Bunuba Dawangarri Aboriginal Corporation RNTBC, Ewamian Aboriginal Corporation RNTBC, & Yanunijarra Aboriginal Corporation RNTBC. (2020). Indigenous Land and Sea Management Programs (ILSMPs) Enhance the Wellbeing of Indigenous Australians. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 17(1), 125. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17010125