Skip to main content

CIPR

  • Home
  • About
    • People
      • Director
      • Academics
      • Current PhD students
  • Research
    • Visiting Indigenous Fellowship
    • Recent Publications
  • Publications
    • CIPR Policy Paper
    • CAEPR Archive
  • News & Events
  • Study with us
  • Contact us

Research Spotlight

  • Japan - Zenadth Kes Project
  • Market value for Indigenous Knowledge
  • Helping Spirits Stay Strong
  • Reparative Ways of Thinking
  • Community Driven Empowerment Through Mabu Liyan

Related Sites

  • ANU College of Arts & Social Sciences
  • Research School of Social Sciences
  • Australian National Internships Program

Administrator

Breadcrumb

HomeResearchPublicationsAboriginal Professionals: Work, Class and Culture
Aboriginal professionals: Work, class and culture
Author/editor: Lahn, J
Year published: 2013
Issue no.: 89

Abstract

This paper considers the increasing representation of Indigenous people in professional occupations. While the predominant focus in Australian scholarship remains contexts of Aboriginal disadvantage, there is a steadily increasing number of Indigenous professionals in Australia among whom many reside in urban locales. In 2006, Indigenous professionals totalled more than 14,000 people, equivalent to 13 per cent of the Indigenous workforce in Australia. Despite being largely overlooked, Aboriginal people themselves are aware of this trend with some debating its relation to emerging ideas of a new Aboriginal 'middle class'. This paper begins by summarising data concerning Aboriginal professionals: their fields of work, education levels and location. It then considers Aboriginal discussion of the term 'middle class', reflecting on attitudes to this expression as a mode of self-description and/or ascription, and its implications within narratives of Aboriginal culture and identity. The paper suggests that greater research engagement with Aboriginal professionals is needed to enlarge understandings of occupational aspirations and social mobility as envisaged among Aboriginal people, in addition to contributing a more complete picture of Aboriginal engagements with work and a clearer appreciation of the diverse shapes of contemporary Aboriginal lives.

Keywords: Urban Indigeneity, professional work, class, social mobility, culture, Indigenous employment

ISBN: 0 7315 4988 0

ISSN: 1442 3871

File attachments

AttachmentSize
WP89LahnWeb_0.pdf(1.31 MB)1.31 MB