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Contemporary planning education and Indigenous cultural competency agendas : erasing terra nullius, respect and responsibility

Abstract

As noted in Universities Australia&rsquo;s (2011a, 2011b) investigations into Indigenous Cultural Competency, most universities have struggled with successfully devising and achieving a translation of Indigenous protocols into their curricula. Walliss &amp; Grant (2000: 65) have also concluded that, given the nature of the built environment disciplines, including planning, and their professional practice activities, there is a &ldquo;need for specific cultural awareness education&rdquo; to service these disciplines and not just attempts to insert Indigenous perspectives into their curricula. Bradley&rsquo;s policy initiative at the University of South Australia (1997-2007), &ldquo;has not achieved its goal of incorporation of Indigenous perspectives into all its undergraduate programs by 2010, it has achieved an incorporation rate of 61%&rdquo; (Universities Australia 2011a: 9; http://www.unisa.edu.au/ducier/icup/default.asp).Contextually, Bradley&rsquo;s strategic educational aim at University of South Australia led a social reformist agenda, which has been continued in Universities Australia&rsquo;s release of Indigenous Cultural Competency (2011a; 2011b) reports that has attracted mixed media criticism (Trounson 2012a: 5, 2012b: 5) and concerns that it represents &ldquo;social engineering&rdquo; rather than enhancing &ldquo;criticism as a pedagogical tool ... as a means of advancing knowledge&rdquo; (Melleuish 2012: 10). While the Planning Institute of Australia&rsquo;s (PIA) Indigenous Planning Policy Working Party has observed that fundamental changes are needed to the way Australian planning education addresses Indigenous perspectives and interests, it has concluded that planners &ldquo;! perceptual limitations of their own discipline and the particular discourse of our own craft&rdquo; were hindering enhanced learning outcomes (Wensing 2007: 2). Gurran (PIA 2007) has noted that the core curriculum in planning includes an expectation of &ldquo;knowledge of ! Indigenous Australian cultures, including relationships between their physical environment and associated social and economic systems&rdquo; but that it has not been addressed. This paper critiques these discourses and offers an Indigenous perspective of the debate.<br /

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