More than 400,000 people visit the park each year, drawn mostly by the massive red monolith. To the local Aboriginal people, Anangu, this rock is Uluru, a complex of places with great spiritual importance. Since
In this chapter, and using Australia's Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peo- ples as a focus, we extend these considerations to reflect on the cross-cultural inter- faces, particularly communications, that influence the success and implementation of Indigenous driven climate change adaptation ...
The Uluru/Kakadu Model: Anangu Tjukurrpa. 50 000 years of Aboriginal Law and Land Management Changing the - Lacy - 1994De Lacy, T. (1994). The Uluru/Kakadu model - Anangu Tjukurrpa: 50,000 years of Aboriginal law and land management changing the concept of National Parks in Australia....
1.An Australian aboriginal people inhabiting the desert regions of southern and western Australia. 2.The Pama-Nyungan language of this people, used as a lingua franca in western Australia. [Pitjantjatjara,those who use the speech, frompitna-ntja,to go, come.] ...
One place they live is called Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara. Okay. I guess they came up with that on one of their famed benders. Their idea of a good time is to drink beer until nauseous. They eat things called quandog, muntries, goanna and witchetty grubs. Are these plants,...
Anangu artists with the Uluru Statement from the Heart. From left: Christine Brumby, Charmaine Kulitja, Rene Kulitja, Happy Reid. Photography by Clive Scollaly. 2020 marks 250 years since the British explorer Lieutenant James Cook first landed on the shores of what we now call Aust...
As a result, several parts are protected, including the Mamungari Conservation Park (one of Australia’s 14 World Biosphere Reserves), the Great Victoria Nature Reserve, and portions of the Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara Aboriginal area. ...
the aboriginal people in 1985, they reverted to the original name, Kata Tjuda, meaning “many heads.” Legends about the origins and spiritual symbolism of the area were kept alive by the oral tradition of the native Anangu people, but they did not repeat the stories to us foreign tourists...
as it’s sacred to the Anangu, the Aboriginal people in the area. They prefer you don’t trample all over their special mountain. OK, fine. The climbing trail ended up being closed due to the wind anyway, but honestly I wouldn’t have wanted to climb it either way…the ‘trail’ is...
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, the aboriginal and treaty rights referred to in subsection (1) are guaranteed equally to male and female persons. 68. Mabo versus Queensland (No 2) (1992) High Court of Australia, 175 C.L.R. 1, para 62. 69. Western Australia versus Ward...