Reference no: EM133118076
Question: Choose TWO topics below to discuss based upon the readings, the lecture and the podcast
1. What is colonisation? What are the past and ongoing practices of colonisation in Australia?
2. What has power got to do with it?
3. How can we support truth telling concerning settler violence?
4. What has 'social work' done to continue the oppression and dispossession?
5. What have been some of the impacts of colonisation on Aboriginal peoples?
Answer them 300 words on the basis of readings and podcast
READ the readings listed in the readings portal for Module 1:
Bennett, B. (2019) Chapter
1. 'The importance of Aboriginal history for practitioners' in Bennett, B. Green, S. (2019) Our Voices. Aboriginal Social Work. 2nd Edit. Macmillan International Higher Education and Red Globe Press.
2. Dudgeon, P., Wright, M., Paradies, Y., Garvey, D., Walker, I. Chapter 1: Aboriginal Social, Cultural and Historical Contexts in Dudgeon, P., Milroy, H., Walker, R. (2014) Working together: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander mental health and wellbeing principles and practice. 2nd Edit. West Perth, WA: Kulunga Research Network.
3. Green, S., Bennett, B. (2018) Wayanha: A Decolonised Social Work, Australian Social Work, 71:3, 261-264
4. LISTEN to 'The ghosts are not silent' by Sam Carmody (expected time: 43.23mins).
'The ghosts are not silent'
COMPULSORY READINGS TO READ BELOW
Dudgeon, & Walker, I. (2014). Aboriginal Social, Cultural and Historical Contexts. In Dudgeon & R. Walker (Eds.), Working Together: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Mental Health and Wellbeing Principles and Practice (2nd ed., pp. 3-24). Commonwealth of Australia.
Bindi Bennett and Sue Green. (2019). The importance of Aboriginal history for practitioners. In Bindi Bennett and Sue Green (Ed.), Our Voices: Aboriginal social work (2nd ed., pp. 3-30).
Green, & Bennett, B. (2018). Wayanha: A Decolonised Social Work. Australian Social Work, 71(3), 261-264.
Attachment:- Readings and podcast.rar