Indigenous Data Sovereignty and Social Work in Australia
In this article we argue that in Australian social work context and practice, Indigenous Data Sovereignty (ID-SOV) needs to be operationalised by enacting the principles of Indigenous Data Governance (ID-GOV). Failure to embed ID-SOV and ID-GOV leaves the profession open to claims that it is complicit in disempowering Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in relation to data. ID-SOV is a global movement focused on Indigenous Peoples having access to, and ownership, control, and possession of, their data. Social work is a profession committed to championing equal rights and challenging injustices. Therefore, it has an obligation to decolonise existing data structures in its workplaces. This article outlines the Australian ID-SOV movement, including current scholarship on operationalising ID-SOV in the form of ID-GOV, and the challenge for social work to position itself in alliance with the ID-SOV movement and in active participation in changing the way Indigenous data have traditionally been collected and used in Australia.
History
Publication title
Australian Social WorkVolume
76Issue
3Pagination
371-378:8eISSN
1447-0748ISSN
0312-407XDepartment/School
Social Work, Office of the School of Social SciencesPublisher
ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTDPublication status
- Published