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GARMA FESTIVAL 4-10 Setpember 2000
Garma Declaration
As Indigenous Australian scholars from across the country
gathered at the second GARMA Festival, 4-10 September
2000, we acknowledge and honour the invitation by the
traditional owners of Gulkula to participate in discussions
of the grounding principles of the GARMA Institute.
We as a national community of Indigenous Australian
scholars support its vision, principles, values and
its working strategies with the following declaration.
Indigenous philosophies of life and their connection
to country, and the knowledges, languages and spiritualities
derived from this, are the foundations to historical
and intellectual traditions that have been in place
since time immemorial. As cornerstones to our peoples
across the nation and our futures in a globally changing
environment, it is important that these principles are
embedded in our lifelong education and embraced by non-Indigenous
peoples. To incorporate Indigenous knowledge traditions
in an inclusive and equal relationship in the formal
learning environment, we state the following :
- We recommend that the Australian Vice-Chancellors
Committee (AVCC) adopt, implement and resource the above
fundamental principles listed across all research and
curriculum areas and that they also inform and underpin
all core teaching and learning practices.
- We acknowledge the AVCCs initial support for
the GARMA Institute, and recommend that this be taken
further to include support for the negotiation and implementation
of the GARMA principles across all research, education
and training sectors.
- We recommend that all activities be undertaken in
partnership with Indigenous units, centres and institutes
in the higher education sector and the broader Indigenous
communities.
- We recommend a monitoring and review process for
benchmarking progress in the key result areas (as noted
in the Draft Strategy Document) to be also done in conjunction
with the Indigenous Higher Education Association and
the broader Indigenous community.
The AVCC is asked that these principles be pursued as
a matter of urgency and given priority.
The future of Indigenous people in Australia rests on
intellectual pathways in formal education processes
that build on principles connecting Land and Community
with people and Indigenous Knowledge Traditions.
- In a rapidly changing global marketplace, it is crucial
that the intellectual and cultural knowledge of Indigenous
people in Australia maintains its key significance in
Australias heritage.
- New partnership arrangements between Indigenous peoples
and the educational authorities are needed to devise
intellectual and cultural infrastructures that can facilitate
learning processes of future caretakers of Indigenous
knowledge and traditions in these changing times.
- Educational funding arrangements thus need to be
reviewed as a matter of urgency and new thinking must be
brought around to the way educational resources are
prioritised and allocated across the country
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