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30 September 2024 Pang-ngooteekeeya weeng malangeepa ngeeye (remembering our future: bringing old ideas to the new)
Jack Pascoe, Marcus Clarke, Ebony Hickey, Laura Prentice, Vicki Couzens, John Clarke
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

In this paper, we highlight the poor health of the Australian environment and propose a new framing for how we care for Maar Country. We identify the basis for our Law/Lore of the Land and describe six guiding principles for our proposed biocultural landscape restoration approach. We also explore the way that our ancestors used cultural stories to guide the management of Country and we reflect on how we are adopting these same approaches today by giving culturally significant entities primacy in our approach to caring for Country. Finally, we extend an invitation to non-Aboriginal scientists, conservationists, and government agencies to work with us to care for Country, in a respectful and holistic manner.

Position statement. We, the authors of this paper, are all either Aboriginal Australians or employed by the Eastern Maar Aboriginal Corporation. We are all actively participating in the Pang-ngooteekeeya weeng malangeepa ngeeye project.

Jack Pascoe, Marcus Clarke, Ebony Hickey, Laura Prentice, Vicki Couzens, and John Clarke "Pang-ngooteekeeya weeng malangeepa ngeeye (remembering our future: bringing old ideas to the new)," Wildlife Research 51(10), (30 September 2024). https://doi.org/10.1071/WR24068
Received: 26 April 2024; Accepted: 31 July 2024; Published: 30 September 2024
KEYWORDS
biocultural landscapes
caring for Country
cultural burning
culturally significant entities
ecological restoration
ethical research
ethnozoology
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