Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-lj6df Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-10T13:15:16.508Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

‘I can speak on this here’: empowerment within an Aboriginal adult literacy campaign

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2020

Frances Williamson*
Affiliation:
School of Education, University of New England, Armidale, NSW2351, Australia
Bob Boughton
Affiliation:
School of Education, University of New England, Armidale, NSW2351, Australia
*
Author for correspondence: Frances Williamson, E-mail: fwilli20@une.edu.au
Get access

Abstract

This case study details the impacts of an Aboriginal-led adult literacy campaign in Brewarrina between 2015 and 2017. Forming part of a wider investigation into literacy as a social determinant of health, the study explores the relationship between involvement in the literacy campaign and the capacity of graduates to take greater control of the conditions affecting their lives. Empowerment is used here as the central explanatory construct despite robust criticism of theoretical slippage. We argue that empowerment remains relevant particularly in the context of ongoing and entrenched disenfranchisement of the low-literate in Australian Aboriginal communities. Drawing on in-depth ‘yarning’ interviews, we find strong evidence of individual empowerment among graduates of the adult literacy campaign, particularly in terms of increased self-control and confidence. However, collective change such as increased participation and organisation at the community level is less apparent. This finding underscores two important aspects of empowerment. Firstly, like learning to read and write, the task of regaining personal and collective power can be a slow and difficult undertaking. Secondly, achieving empowerment is intimately linked to addressing the causes of disempowerment. This ultimately means tackling those power relations which impact choices, opportunities and well-being beyond the borders of individual's lives and communities.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s) 2020

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Ashcroft, L (1987) Defusing ‘empowering’: the what and the why. Language Arts 64, 142156.Google Scholar
Atkinson, J (2000) Trauma Trails, Recreating Song Lines; The Transgenerational Effects of Trauma in Indigenous Australia. Melbourne: Spinifex Press.Google Scholar
Australian Bureau of Statistics (2016) Census Quick stats Brewarrina. Retrieved 17th June 2018 from http://quickstats.censusdata.abs.gov.au/census_services/getproduct/census/2016/quickstaq/LGA11200.Google Scholar
Barker, J (1988) The Two Worlds of Jimmie Barker: The Life of an Australian Aboriginal 1900–1972. Canberra: Aboriginal Studies Press.Google Scholar
Barker, L (2008) ‘Hangin’ Out’ and ‘Yarnin’: Reflecting on the Experience of Collecting Oral Histories, History Australia, 5:1, 09.1. doi: 10.2104/ha080009.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Black, S (2018) From ‘empowerment’ to ‘compliance’: neoliberalism and adult literacy provision in Australia. Journal for Critical Education Policy Studies 16, 104144.Google Scholar
Boughton, B (2009) Popular education for literacy & health development in Indigenous Australia. Australian Journal of Indigenous Education 38, 103108.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boughton, B (2013) Mass literacy campaigns: a pedagogy of hope? Fine Print 36, 38.Google Scholar
Boughton, B and Williamson, F (2019). ‘A strong belief in the possibility of a better life’. The pedagogy of contingency and the ethic of solidarity in the Yes, I Can! Aboriginal Adult Literacy Campaign. In Harper, H and Rennie, J (Eds.), Literacy Education and Indigenous Australians: Theory, Research, and Practice. Singapore: Springer, pp. 293–312.Google Scholar
Boughton, B, Chee, DA, Beetson, J, Durnan, D and Leblanch, JC (2013) An Aboriginal Adult Literacy Campaign in Australia using Yes I Can. Literacy and Numeracy Studies 21, 532.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, L (2018) Indigenous young people, disadvantage and the violence of settler colonial education policy and curriculum. Journal of Sociology 55(1), 118.Google Scholar
Chandola, T, Kuper, H, Singh-Manoux, A, Bartley, M and Marmot, M (2004) The effect of control at home on CHD events in the Whitehall II study: gender differences in psychosocial domestic pathways to social inequalities in CHD. Social Science Medicine 58, 15011509.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Commonwealth of Australia (2014) Creating Parity. The Forrest Review. Canberra: Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet.Google Scholar
Cornwall, A (2016) Women's empowerment: what works? Journal of International Development 28, 342359.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Daes, E (2000) Striving for self-determination for Indigenous peoples. In Kly, Y and Kly, D (Eds), In Pursuit of the Right to Self-Determination. Geneva: Clarity Press, pp. 50–51.Google Scholar
Daniele, L (2017) Discourses on empowerment in adult learning: a view on renewed learning. IAFOR Journal of Education 5, 5064 https://doi.org/10.22492/ije.5.2.02.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Department of Justice, NSW (2018). New South Wales recorded crime statistics quarterly update. Sydney: New South Wales Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research.Google Scholar
Dudgeon, P, Scrine, C, Cox, A and Walker, R (2017) Facilitating empowerment and self-determination through participatory action research findings from the national empowerment project international. Journal of Qualitative Methods 16, 111.Google Scholar
Freire, P (1971) Pedagogy of the Oppressed. New York: Seabury Press.Google Scholar
Freire, P (1998) The adult literacy process as cultural action for freedom. Harvard Educational Review 68, 480518.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Galloway, S (2015) What's missing when empowerment is a purpose for adult literacies education? Bourdieu, gee and the problem of accounting for power. Studies in the Education of Adults 47, 4963.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Giroux, H (1988) Literacy and the pedagogy of voice and political empowerment. Educational Theory 38, 6175.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goodall, H (2008) Invasion to Embassy: Land in Aboriginal Politics in New South Wales, 1770–1972. Sydney: Sydney University Press.Google Scholar
Griffin, J, Fuhrer, R, Stansfeld, S and Marmot, M (2002) The importance of low control at work and at home on depression and anxiety: do these effects vary by gender and social class? Social Science Medicine 54, 783789.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gunstone, A (2013) Indigenous education 1991–2000: documents, outcomes and governments. The Australian Journal of Indigenous Education 41, 7584.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, H (1992) Women's empowerment and public action: Experiences from Latin America. In Wuyts, M, Mackintosh, M and Hewitt, T (Eds), Development Policy and Public Action. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 147174.Google Scholar
Lankshear, C (1994) Afterword: Reclaiming empowerment and rethinking the past. In Escobar, M (Ed.), Paulo Freire on Higher Education: a Dialogue at the National University of Mexico. pp. 161188.Google Scholar
McKendrick, J, Brooks, R, Hudson, J, Thorpe, M and Bennett, P (2013) Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Healing Programs: a Literature Review. Canberra: Healing Foundation.Google Scholar
McLean, P, Perkins, K, Tout, D, Brewer, K and Wyse, L (2012) Australian Core Skills Framework. Commonwealth of Australia. Retrieved from http://research.acer.edu.au/transitions_misc/12.Google Scholar
McWhirter, E (1991) Empowerment in counselling. Journal of Counselling and Development 69, 222227.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miller, A (2017) Neighbourhood justice centres and Indigenous empowerment. Australian Indigenous Law Review 20, 123153.Google Scholar
Norman, H (2015) What do we Want? A Political History of Aboriginal Land Rights in New South Wales. Canberra: Aboriginal Studies Press.Google Scholar
Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (2017) Building Skills for All in Australia: Policy Insights from the Survey of Adult Skills. Retrieved from http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/9789264281110-en.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Power, K (1999) Acting Globally by Thinking Locally: A Postcolonial Partnership. Paper presented at the AARE [Association for Active Educational Researchers] Conference, Melbourne, pp. 111.Google Scholar
Prins, E (2008) Adult literacy education gender equity and empowerment insights from a Freirean inspired literacy program. Studies in the Education of Adults 40, 2439.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ratcliffe, R and Boughton, B (2019) The relationship between low adult literacy levels and Aboriginal family and community engagement in educational decision making. Australian and International Journal of Rural Education 29, 116.Google Scholar
Rowlands, J (1997) Questioning Empowerment: Working with Women in Honduras. Oxford, UK: Oxfam.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sherwood, J (2010) Do no harm: decolonising Aboriginal health research (PhD thesis). University of New South Wales.Google Scholar
Smith, LT (1999) Decolonizing Methodologies: Research and Indigenous Peoples. Dunedin: University of Otago Press.Google Scholar
St Clair, R (2010) Why Literacy Matters: Understanding the Effects of Literacy Education for Adults. Leicester: National Institute of Adult Continuing Education.Google Scholar
Stromquist, N (2009) Literacy and Empowerment: A Contribution to the Debate. Background Study Commissioned in the Framework of the United Nations Literacy Decade. Paris: UNESCO.Google Scholar
Stromquist, N (2014) Freire, literacy and emancipatory gender learning. International Review of Education 60, 545558.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vinson, T, Rawsthorn, M, Beavis, A and Ericson, M (2015) Dropping of the Edge 2015: Persistent Communal Disadvantage in Australia. Richmond, Victoria: R Jesuit Social services.Google Scholar
Whiteside, M, Tsey, K, McCalman, J, Cadet-James, Y and Wilson, A (2006) Empowerment as a framework for Indigenous workforce development and organisational change. Australian Social Work 59, 422434.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whiteside, M, Tsey, K and Earles, W (2011) Locating empowerment in the context of Indigenous Australia. Australian Social Work 64, 113129.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wilson, B, Abbott, T, Quinn, S, Guenther, J, McRae-Williams, T and Cairney, S (2018) Empowerment is the basis for improving education and employment outcomes for Aboriginal people in remote Australia. The Australian Journal of Indigenous Education 48(2), 19. doi: 10.1017/jie.2018.2.Google Scholar
Wise, J, Harris, B, Nickson, R, Boughton, B and Beetson, J (2018) Impact of the ‘Yes, I Can!’ Adult Literacy Campaign on Interactions with the Criminal Justice System. Trends & Issues in Crime and Criminal Justice No. 562. Canberra: Australian Institute of Criminology. https://aic.gov.au/publications/tandi/tandi562.Google Scholar
Wogan, P (2004) Deep hanging out: reflections on fieldwork and multisited Andean ethnography. Identities: Global Studies in Culture and Power 11, 129139.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Youngman, F (1996) Literacy For empowerment? Reflections on an international seminar. Journal of AALAE 10, 7485.Google Scholar