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In Australia, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people have occupied the land for more than 60,000 years; with diverse and unique language groups, cultural practices, and land and sea resource management. This continuous occupation was disrupted in 1788 by settler colonisers. Contemporary health disparities experienced by Indigenous people’s is directly related to colonisation and the ensuing displacement of peoples from their ancestral lands.
In spite of this, Indigenous cultures have endured and been maintained through the sustained advocacy of Indigenous leaders (particularly Elders), providing hope and renewal to younger generations. Contemporaneously, improvements to Indigenous people’s health outcomes is most often the result of Indigenous-led solutions to identified priorities. This special collection includes a selection of Indigenous led primary led health care solutions.
Edited by:
Rhonda Marriott
Director
Tracy Reibel
Principal Research Fellow
Ngangk Yira Centre for Aboriginal Research and Social Equity,
Murdoch University