In the wake of discussion of Andrew Forrest’s proposal for the creation of 50 000 full time jobs for Indigenous Australians (discussed here at LP) and Germaine Greer’s remarks on the continuing force of history in shaping Indigenous responses to state initiatives (discussed here and see the video of last night’s Q&A), I thought it was worth linking to a paper prepared for the Australian Education Union by UTS Indigenous academics Larissa Behrendt and Ruth McCausland. The specific topic they examine is welfare quarantining and schooling outcomes. I’d recommend anyone interested read the whole thing, but the abstract has also been posted at Australian Policy Online.
As well as discussing the philosophy of mutual obligation (referred to as John Howard’s most significant legacy to social policy), the authors point to the lack of an evidence base for most policy initiatives in this area – something almost totally lacking in the research which justified Noel Pearson’s proposals for “family commissions” in Cape York, which is now being held up as a model for the rest of Australia. This appears inconsistent with Jenny Macklin’s disclaimers of ideological motivation and claims that evidence and “what works” would be the criterion for Indigenous policy. They also point to several studies which demonstrate that parental responsibility in sending kids to schools is at best only one factor in school attendance and outcomes, with the quality of schooling and child health also being very important variables.
The obvious conclusion to be drawn is that most policy initiatives in this area are at best blunt instruments. It also suggests that they are being driven by a new orthodoxy – arguments about “personal responsibility” and “social norms” being more assertion than evidence based. Most tellingly, perhaps, and here Greer’s comments are important too, is the suggestion that the obligation is almost entirely one sided and thus lacking in mutuality – and that the state is failing to put in place the preconditions for such experiments to have much chance of providing enduring outcomes. That doesn’t leave me feeling me feeling very hopeful about the prospects of closing the gap.

Recent comments
joe2, ewe2, Quoll, David Irving (no relation), Wood Duck, David Irving (no relation) [...]
murph the surf., Saint Furious of Ikea, Helen, Laura, conrad, murph the surf. [...]
Brent, Jacques de Molay, Saint Furious of Ikea, David Irving (no relation), Deborah, David Irving (no relation) [...]
Mercurius, Gummo Trotsky, Ootz, desipis, John D, Fran Barlow [...]
CMMC, Jack Strocchi, Jacques de Molay, Saint Furious of Ikea, Brett, Saint Furious of Ikea [...]
Gummo Trotsky, Ginja, GregM, PD41, Enemy Combatant, Matilda [...]
Ian Curr, Chav, Chav, Liam, Paul Norton, Fran Barlow [...]
John D, HuggyBunny, Chris, Tim Macknay, carbonsink, Elise [...]
Frankie V., armagny, sg, Robert Merkel, wilful
Caroline Church, Fran Barlow, Sam, Jenny, Sam, Kim [...]
Liam, anthony nolan, pablo, Ute Man, Col. Douglas C. Niedermeyer, Mindy [...]
David Irving (no relation), Roger Jones, David Irving (no relation), Elise, Paul Norton, Gummo Trotsky [...]