Making Business Work
If you have the time or inclination to read only
one book on Aboriginal affairs this year, I would strongly suggest that you pick
up Kim Christen's Aboriginal Business: alliances in a remote Australian
town (SAR Press, 2008/Aboriginal Studies Press,
2009).Christen
has
been working with the Warumungu traditional owners around Tennant Creek for
almost fifteen years now. She has helped them build the digital Mukurtu Archive of their history and
culture, and was active in the planning and construction of the Nyinkka Nyunyu
Cultural Centre. I was able to hear her lecture about both of these activities
at the Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection in April 2008, and at the time she
impressed me with her energy, enthusiasm, and multi-leveled appreciation for the
lives and work of her Warumungu
friends.In Aboriginal Business,
she expands the scope of her investigations enormously, which is one reason to
make this your top choice for this year's reading list. In addition to
addressing the "culture work" of the archives and cultural centre and the story
of the production of a commercial CD of Warumungu women's songs, Christen offers
a history of settler-Indigenous relations and interactions in the Tennant Creek
region, focusing especially on the time since it became the center of the last
major gold rush in Australian history during the 1930s. Part of what makes this
such a fascinating story is the nature of the settlements at Tennant Creek.
Established during the building of the Overland Telegraph in the 1870s, it is
relatively remote, 500 km north of Alice Springs and 1000 south of Darwin, with
little in the way of European settlement nearby. In 2001, approximately a third
of the town's population of 3,000 was Indigenous. Thus, it shares traits of a
white settler town and a remote Aboriginal community, largely Warumungu but with
a Warlpiri, Alyawarr, and Kaytetye presence as
well.Christen details the story of
conflicting land claims on both sides and talks about the succession of "mobs"
that have tried to manage them: miners, government bureaucrats, lawyers, and
throughout, Aboriginal families. She looks at the roles the Central Land
Council, ATSIC, the Giants Reef mining company, the Federal, Territory, and town
governments, and the railway companies have played in Tennant Creek. Each of
her six thematic chapters looks at a different aspect of Aboriginal business in
the town: land claims; Aboriginal organizations; mining; railways; cultural
transmission in an age of digital technology; and the Nyinkka Nyunyu Cultural
Centre.The unifying theme that runs
throughout these varied enterprises is announced in the book's subtitle and
treated in the first, preliminary chapter: the making of alliances. By focusing
on the work, the business of negotiation, contestation, and compromise, Christen
is able to chart a history of Warumungu agency in Tennant Creek, its ups and its
downs, but above all its persistence. This is a story about how people engage
with their country and with those others who have come to occupy it with them.
In her portrait of the Warumungu, they are neither passive victims nor
activists, but rather women and men engaged in the business of living, with all
their aspirations, disappointments, conflicts, and solutions.
That is not to say that Christen does
not fully acknowledge the disadvantage under which the Warumungu labor. In the
early chapters of the book she skillfully weaves together two narratives. The
first is of the original dispossession as first the Overland Telegraph and then
the gold mines brought waves of outsiders to the Barkly, intent upon taking over
the land and pushing aside the Indigenous populace. The second is the effects
of government policy in the last thirty years, culminating in Howard's
Intervention. The philosophy of the Howard Government, with its emphasis on
"practical reconciliation" and the "mainstreaming" of Aboriginal affairs into a
broader Australian nation, stands as a metaphor for the logic of whitefella
business that operates to exclude Aboriginal participation and
agency.In contrast, and perhaps to a
degree in consequence, "Aboriginal business" has come to focus on the work of
forging alliances, of harnessing willing partners and forcing unwilling
collaborators into arrangements that provide options and choice for the
Warumungu and allow them to assert their own position in the management of their
lives and their country. The
historical sweep of Christen's narrative shows how these strategies have changed
over time, all the while remaining focused on retaining control. Christen
deftly skewers the gazetting of country around Tennant Creek, describing how the
map making and marking of early white settlers was irrelevant to the Warumungu
who remained as ignorant of the "power" of such pronouncements as the settlers
were of the marking of country by the Dreaming tracks of the Warumungu
ancestors. She demonstrates how in later years the Warumungu exploited the
resources of missions and cattle stations and made those settlements the locus
of their own social interactions: how the business of alliance-making among
Aboriginal families was made necassary by whitefella settlement and at the same
time forced negotiations between Aboriginal and
settler.When the historical trends of
dispossession stood a chance of reversal in the wake of the Aboriginal Land
Rights Act (ALRA) and the opening of legal negotiations in the 70s and 80s, the
Warumungu developed new tactics for doing business with lawyers, pastoralists,
and miners. Christen treats the effects of these changes with subtlety, noting,
for example, how Aboriginal men may have chosen at times to say no to certain
deals simply to exercise a long-denied prerogative, and at other times to
impress upon potential partners the seriousness of taking care of country; they
may also have said yes in order to open up economic opportunities. In her
chapter on collaborations with mining companies, Christen describes the dynamic
in the wake of the ALRA:
Mining has been, out of necessity, a joint venture; various parties negotiate deals, sign contracts, and share royalties. Aboriginal people rely on mining companies to run explorations, buy equipment, hire workers (Aboriginal or non-Aboriginal), and produce profits. Aboriginal consent, guaranteed by the ALRA, does not mean total control; it is a means to alter the parameters of engagement within the industry and shift some benefits back to Aboriginal individuals and communities. A large sign in the Tennant Creek branch of the CLC offices makes Aboriginal land-based opportunities clear:
EXPLORATION COMPANY WANTS TO LOOK AROUND YOUR COUNTRY? WHAT YOU CAN DO:
1) DO NOTHING
2) TRY TO BLOCK IT
3) MAKE AN AGREEMENT
The choices are not endless (p. 144, emphasis in the original).
The blunt set of options outlined by
the CLC, with its pragmatic conclusion, "make an agreement," sums up the story
of recent Warumungu history as presented in Aboriginal Business. The
chapter on the completion of the Darwin-to-Alice leg of the transcontinental
railway offers an example of ways in which alliances work two ways. Working
with representatives from ADrail, Warumungu people helped to chart a course for
the laying of track through their country and to identify resources (like
gravel) that would be required by the rail company to complete the portions of
the track that ran through country around Tennant Creek. These exploratory
journeys also facilitated the Warumungu's ability to care for country by
providing transportation out to country that would otherwise be difficult to
visit while at the same time introducing that country to the railway's
officers.The naming of two locomotives
the Purnu (which appropriately means "carrier") and the Aboriginal
Stockman added the element of "symbolic" reconciliation to the practical
business of building a railroad, thus acknowledging the importance of
recognizing Indigenous history in a way that John Howard was at the time
vociferously denying. The names, one in Warumungu and one in English,
acknowledge pre- and post-contact history, and so comprehend both Dreaming
tracks and track of cast steel.
The community of responsible Warumungu leaders brought their territorial knowledge to bear on this project in a way that married ancestral need with contemporary economic goals. ... Taking railway workers out to sites of significance and negotiating the benefits for their own communities, these Warumungu leaders situated country obligations in a new constellation of responsibility, in which railway officials and construction companies became secondary agents in the oversight and care of Aboriginal country. Defining aspects of their country for the railway companies meant inviting them to see the land and their partnerships differently. It also gave the Warumungu people a change to conduct their own country business (p. 181).
These are but a few examples drawn
from the riches of Christen's book to illustrate the ways in which Tennant
Creek's Aboriginal people conduct their business both within their own
communities and with the larger Australian state. Through them, she effectively
and marvelously obliterates the tension between continuity and change, between
tradition and modernity. For the Warumungu, there is no choice between living
in the past and living with the modern state; there is only the option of
living.Although Christen's work has
been ongoing and this book itself been in preparation for several years now, its
appearance at this moment seems particularly timely in the wake of the July 2
release of Overcoming Indigenous Disadvantage: Key Indicators
2009, which has been the subject of much media commentary this month.
For example, Fred Chaney was quoted in The Australian recently as saying,
"The really important thing is to get permanent gains, not to waste the money.
Those permanent gains will be best obtained if the Aboriginal people are
strongly involved ... and that takes time. ... I would like to see more
attention being paid not to speed of action, but on the effectiveness of action
("Engage Aborigines to solve race problems, Rudd
urged," July 11, 2009). Christen's book demonstrates the wisdom of
following Chaney's advice. Just this week, Nicolas Rothwell praised the upsurge
in local, grass-roots organizations that are wresting solutions from the
welfare-era government bureaucracies ("The local road to recovery," The
Australian, July 18, 2009). Christen's work shows rather how those old
bureaucracies made possible new local solutions by providing a model for local
organization; it also demonstrates that such local initiatives are anything but
new.Aboriginal Business offers
welcome and timely insights into both historical issues and contemporary social
concerns. Encompassing government, law, the arts, and industry, it likewise
provides an appreciation of the sweep of concerns the Warumungu are acting upon.
In her synthesis of the diachronic and the synchronic perspectives on life in
this corner of the Barkly Tableland, Kim Christen offers an analysis that is at
once timely and timeless.For
another look at Aboriginal Business in Tennant Creek, check out
Christen's photos of the book launch there last Monday on
Flickr.Postscript: Kim has
just written an eloquent, moving, and heartfelt post on the book launch and its effect on her
and the people of Tennant Creek on her blog, Long
Road . It says far more than I ever could about what this book
truly means.
Posted: Sun - July 19, 2009 at 12:20 PM
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Readings, reviews, and reflections by an American observer of Australian Indigenous art, culture, politics, anthropology, music, and literature.
If you don't wish to leave comments on the blog itself please feel free to contact me directly. Will Owen
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Published On: Jul 19, 2009 07:24 PM
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