Why is it that aboriginal people who have mixed blood are


Assignment 1: Deconstruction Exercise questions

Choose only one question. 1000 word

1. Why is it that Aboriginal people who have 'mixed blood' are the ones who succeed in life?

2. Why are all Aboriginal people lazy bums?

3. Why don't Aboriginal people take an interest in their own health?

4. Can we really allow the process of decolonisation? And what are the implications for white Australia?

REFERENCES:
- Australian Medical Association (AMA), (2007), ‘Institutionalised Equity: Not Just a Matter of Money'. Australian Medical Association Report Card Series 2007 - Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health, accessed 13/08/2011 from: https://ama.com.au/node/3229
- Banks, G., (2009), How Can We Overcome Indigenous Disadvantage?, Presentation at Reconciliation Australia's Closing the Gap Conversations Series, National Library, Canberra, 7th July 2009, accessed 13/08/2011 from: https://www.pc.gov.au/speeches/cs20090707-overcoming-indigenous-disadvantage
- Baum, F. (2008), The New Public Health (3rd Edition), Oxford University Press, South Melbourne, Victoria.
- Burgess, C. P., Johnston, F.H., Berry, H.L., McDonnell, J., Yibarbuk, D., Gunabarra, C., Mileran, A. & Bailie, R.S. (2009), ‘Healthy Country, Healthy People: the Relationship between Indigenous Health Status and "Caring for Country", MJA, 190 (10), pp. 567 - 572.
- Carson, B., Dunbar, T., Chenall, R.D. & Bailie, R. (Eds), (2007), Social Determinants of Indigenous Health, Allen & Unwin, Crows Nest, NSW.
- Catto, M., & Thomson, N. (2008), Review of illicit drug use among Indigenous peoples. Retrieved 10/08/2011 from https://www.healthinfonet.ecu.edu.au/health-risks/illicit-drugs/reviews/our-review
- Day, A., Nakata, M. & Howells, K. (Eds), (2008), Anger and Indigenous Men: Understanding and Responding to Violent Behaviour, The Federation Press, Leichhardt, NSW.
- Foucault, M (1985), The Order of Things: An Archaeology of the Human Sciences, Tavistock Publications, London.
- Galabuzi G. (2002), Social Exclusion, A paper and presentation given at The Social Determinants of Health Across the Life-Span Conference, Toronto, November 2002.
- Hall, S. (1992), "The West and the Rest: discourses and power" in Schech, S. & Haggis, J. (2002), Development: A Cultural Studies Reader, Blackwell, London.
- Hall, S. (1997), "Representation: Cultural Representations and Signifying Practices" in Schech, S. and Haggis, J. (2002) Development: A Cultural Studies Reader, Blackwell, London.
- Kawachi, I., and Kennedy, B.P., (1997), Health and social cohesion: why care about income inequality?, British Medical Journal, 314.7086, pp.1037. Accessed 10/08/2011. https://www.bmj.com/cgi/content/abstract/314/7086/1037
- Keleher, H. & MacDougall, C. (Eds), (2009), Understanding Health: A Determinants Approach, Oxford University Press, South Melbourne, Victoria.
- Marmot M. & Wilkinson, R., Eds, (2008), Social determinants of health, 2nd edn, Oxford University Press, Oxford.
- Mitchell, T. (1992), "Orientalism and the Exhibitionary Order" in Nicholas B. Dirks, Ed. Colonialism and Culture, Anne Arbour, University of Michigan Press
- Moreton-Robinson, A. (2003), I Still Call Australia Home: Indigenous Belonging and Place in a White Postcolonizing Society, Chapter 1, pp. 23 - 32 in Ahmed, S., Castada, C., Fortier, A. (2003), Uprooting/Regroundings: Questions of Home and Migration, Oxford Berg Publishers, Electronic resource.
- Productivity Commission (2009), Overcoming Indigenous Disadvantage, accessed 13/08/2011 from: https://www.pc.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0015/90132/02-overview.pdf
- Ring I.T. & Brown N. (2002), ‘Indigenous health: chronically inadequate responses to damning statistics'. MJA, 177 (2), , pp. 629-631, accessed 13/08/2011 from:
https://www.mja.com.au/public/issues/177_11_021202/rin10435_fm.pdf
- Rowley, K.G., O'Dea K., Anderson, I.; McDermott, R., Saraswati, K., Tilmout, R., Roberts, I., Fitz, J., Wang, Z., Jenkins, A., Best, J.D., Wang, Zh. & Brown, A. (2008), ‘Lower than Expected Morbidity and Mortality for an Australian Aboriginal Population: 10 year follow-up in a decentralised community, MJA, 188 (5), pp. 283-287.
- Said, E. (1995) Orientalism, Penguin, London.
- Schech, S. & Haggis, J. (2002) Development: A Cultural Studies Reader, Blackwell, London.
- Spurr, D. (1993), The Rhetoric of Empire: Colonial Discourse in Journalism, Travel Writing, and Imperial Administration, Duke University Press, Durham.
- Thomson N., MacRae, A., Burns, J., Catto, M., Debuyst. O., Krom, I., Midford, R., Potter, C., Ride, K., Stumpers, S., Urquhart, B. (2010), Overview of Australian Indigenous health status, April 2010. Perth, WA: Australian Indigenous HealthInfoNet.
- Vickery, J., Faulkhead, S., Adams, K. & Clarke, A. (2004), ‘Indigenous Insights into Oral History, Social Determinants and Decolonisation, Chapter 2 in I. Anderson, F. Baum & M. Bentley (eds), Beyond Bandaids: Exploring the Underlying Social Determinants of Aboriginal Health. Papers from the Social Determinants of Aboriginal Health Workshop, Adelaide, July 2004, Cooperative Research Centre for Aboriginal Health, Darwin.
- Wilkinson, R. & Marmot, M. Eds, (2003), Social determinants of health: the solid facts, 2nd edn, WHO Regional Office for Europe, Copenhagen.
- Wilson M., Stearne A., Gray D., & Saggers, S. (2010), ‘The harmful use of alcohol amongst Indigenous Australians,' Australian Indigenous HealthInfoNet website. Retrieved 10/08/2011 from:https://www.healthinfonet.ecu.edu.au/alcoholuse_review

Tips for the Deconstruction Exercise

- Do not answer the question.

- Break the question down into words and analyse the words used.

- What is the question implying?

- What assumptions does the question make?

- Does the question echo stereotypes?

- Does the question exhibit a lack of understanding?

- Please look carefully at the example in the Topic details on pages 6-7.

- Please read the Example paper on the FLO site

- As you've read in the example paper in response to a question regarding Aboriginal people and alcohol and drug abuse A critical approach is not inviting you to discuss substance abuse issues in Aboriginal Australia, it is asking you to examine homogenous approaches to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. A critical approach will analyse the use of the word ‘prone' as one that suggests substance abuse is somehow inherent in Indigenous Australians. Exhibit your understanding of social and economic exclusion and the subsequent impacts on mental health in Aboriginal communities. Are Aboriginal people who abuse substances just making poor choices or do social determinants come into play?

Tips for the Deconstruction Exercise

- Do not answer the question.

- Break the question down into words and analyse the words used.

- What is the question implying?

- What assumptions does the question make?

- Does the question echo stereotypes?

- Does the question exhibit a lack of understanding?

- Please look carefully at the example in the Topic details on pages 6-7.

- Please read the Example paper on the FLO site

- As you've read in the example paper in response to a question regarding Aboriginal people and alcohol and drug abuse A critical approach is not inviting you to discuss substance abuse issues in Aboriginal Australia, it is asking you to examine homogenous approaches to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. A critical approach will analyse the use of the word ‘prone' as one that suggests substance abuse is somehow inherent in Indigenous Australians. Exhibit your understanding of social and economic exclusion and the subsequent impacts on mental health in Aboriginal communities. Are Aboriginal people who abuse substances just making poor choices or do social determinants come into play?
Tips for the Deconstruction Exercise

- Do not answer the question.

- Break the question down into words and analyse the words used.

- What is the question implying?

- What assumptions does the question make?

- Does the question echo stereotypes?

- Does the question exhibit a lack of understanding?

- Please look carefully at the example in the Topic details on pages 6-7.

- Please read the Example paper on the FLO site

- As you've read in the example paper in response to a question regarding Aboriginal people and alcohol and drug abuse A critical approach is not inviting you to discuss substance abuse issues in Aboriginal Australia, it is asking you to examine homogenous approaches to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. A critical approach will analyse the use of the word ‘prone' as one that suggests substance abuse is somehow inherent in Indigenous Australians. Exhibit your understanding of social and economic exclusion and the subsequent impacts on mental health in Aboriginal communities. Are Aboriginal people who abuse substances just making poor choices or do social determinants come into play?

1000 words

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