A Quiet Revolution in Indigenous Service Delivery
New Public Management and its Effects on First Nations Organisations
Contributor(s)
Howard-Wagner, Deirdre (editor)
Language
EnglishAbstract
The government Indigenous service market that is now well entrenched in the public administration system has operated to marginalise First Nations people and First Nations organisations, who have had very little say, if any, over the last 20 years, about how government services are designed to meet their needs. The chapters in this volume comprehensively describe and illustrate how the government Indigenous market, and the Indigenous service delivery system created around that market, have failed and why system change is needed. The book offers the expertise of individual community-controlled First Nations organisations operating in urban settings in NSW, which variously operate as social enterprises, businesses, community development organisations, social service providers, representatives and advocacy organisations. Concentrating on the experiences of individual First Nations organisations allows us to examine the complex, layered Indigenous service system as a multi-jurisdictional phenomenon on the ground in an urban context.
Keywords
Indigenous policy; public administration; community-controlled organisations; New Public Management; self-determinationDOI
10.22459/cipr41.2025ISBN
9781760466886, 9781760466886, 9781760466879Publisher
ANU PressPublisher website
https://press.anu.edu.au/Publication date and place
Canberra, 2025Imprint
ANU PressSeries
Centre for Indigenous Policy Research (CIPR), 41Classification
Indigenous peoples
Indigenous people: governance and politics
Public administration


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