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The Australian National University
Centre for Aboriginal Economic Policy Research
ANU College of Arts and Social Sciences
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CAEPR's Mission

CAEPR’s mission is to contribute to better outcomes for Indigenous Australians by informing constructive academic and public debates based on innovative research; analysing changes in Indigenous socio-economic status; and informing and influencing policy formation. CAEPR will do this with research, teaching and outreach that combines academic excellence of the highest international standards with realism, objectivity and relevance.

CAEPR's Vision

CAEPR’s vision is to be a national centre at the Australian National University, leading in research and teaching excellence on Indigenous economic and social development and public policy.

[ What's New? Latest CAEPR Documents and Publications ]

Welcome to CAEPR!

The Centre

CAEPR was established in March 1990 under an agreement between the Australian National University (ANU) and the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission (ATSIC). In 1999, after review, CAEPR was established as an independent Centre within the University. The Centre's research is supported by funding from the ANU, the Department of Families, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs (FaCSIA), and the Australia Research Council, and from industry partners including Reconciliation Australia, Rio Tinto, Bawinanga Aboriginal Corporation, and the Northern Territory and Western Australian governments.

Functions

CAEPR's rolling triennial research program is formulated through an annual planning process. Our current plan is divided into three broad research themes:

  1. Indigenous Economic and Social Circumstances

  2. Development Options for Indigenous Economic Futures

  3. Education, Governance and Capacity Development.

The Centre's research focuses on both Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians despite its name, which reflects an original contractual requirement and is retained owing to its established reputation.

Annual Reports

CAEPR Annual Reports are available for download in Adobe Acrobat (PDF) format:

The Annual Reports of the ARC Indigenous Community Governance Project (ICGP) are available for download in Adobe Acrobat (PDF) format:

Advisory Committee

CAEPR operates under a Director who is assisted by an Advisory Committee. Professor Jon Altman, Foundation Director since July 1990, is responsible to the Vice-Chancellor for the overall operation of the Centre and also reports to the Chair of the Advisory Committee. The Advisory Committee comprises five senior ANU academics appointed by the Vice-Chancellor, two Indigenous community representative nominated by the Advisory Committee, and a senior officer from the Department of Families, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs (FaCSIA), nominated by the Secretary of that department. The Advisory Committee meets twice each calendar year.

Research Program and Strategic Vision

CAEPR develops its research program with a variety of interest groups and its sponsors. The research program is then presented to the Advisory Committee for endorsement. As a university-based research centre, CAEPR does not take any official view and all CAEPR research is independent scholarship. A substantial proportion of CAEPR's research is based on fieldwork in Indigenous communities.

To learn of Centre's current research in more detail, see the CAEPR Strategic Plan 2006-2008 (PDF Document) and the CAEPR Research Plan 2008-2010 (PDF Document).

The Research Plan 2007-2009, Research Plan 2006-2008, Research Plan 2005-2007 and Research Plan 2004-2006 (PDF) are also available.

Staff

CAEPR is staffed by a multi-disciplinary social sciences team with a very broad range of academic backgrounds and experiences. Disciplines represented include anthropology, demography, economics, geography, education, statistics and political science.

Academic staff are supported by an executive officer, centre coordinator, research officer/editor, three research assistants, a publications editor/webmaster, and a part-time statistical officer. Staff details can be found on our Staff Profiles page.

Graduate Study

CAEPR offers the opportunity for full-time or part-time students to undertake research leading to a Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) or Master of Philosophy (MPhil) degree in a broad range of disciplines including anthropology, demography, economics, political science, and public policy. CAEPR staff teach the elective ‘Development Dilemmas for Indigenous Australians’ in the Master of Applied Anthropology and Participatory Development (MAAPD), and offer student internships to participants in that program.

CAEPR is a unique university-based Indigenous economic and social policy focused research centre. It has a critical mass and ever increasing intellectual capital generated by a steady and committed staff establishment; it has a proven track record and research credibility; and it offers a genuinely multi-disciplinary social sciences, strongly fieldwork-based approach that is also forging disciplinary links with ecological and biological sciences. All of these features make it an attractive location for graduate students. For more information, visit our Graduate Study pages.

Visiting Indigenous Fellowship Scheme

Indigenous engagement is a high priority within CAEPR, reflecting in our ongoing commitment to such engagement across a range of areas, as outlined in the CAEPR Strategic Plan. Specific action strategies for Indigenous engagement include:

  • Promoting strategic alliances and collaborations with key Indigenous organisations and researchers;

  • Actively targeting and attracting key Indigenous researchers to CAEPR; and

  • Providing periodic summaries of research findings to key Indigenous stakeholders.

The Visiting Indigenous Fellowships program at CAEPR aims to attract Indigenous scholars to collaborate with researchers at CAEPR, in order for them to transfer their newly acquired or further developed research skills and research outcomes back to their base community or region for practical application. Developed with significant financial contributions from the Rio Tinto Aboriginal Foundation and the Westpac Foundation in partnership with the Australian National University, the Fellowship provides opportunities for Indigenous research capacity building and enhanced engagement and collaboration between CAEPR research staff and non-CAEPR Indigenous researchers and leaders. There were four successful Visiting Indigenous Fellowships in 2005, with a similar number planned for 2006. For more information, see the Visiting Indigenous Fellow page.

Conferences, Seminars & Workshops

CAEPR holds regular public seminars given by Centre staff and visiting academics. Our most recent seminar program can be found on the Events page. The Centre also conducts occasional specialised in-house and public workshops. Workshop topics have included statistical needs for effective Indigenous policy formulation, Aboriginal employment equity, the institutional implications of native title, and the appropriate means to assess the housing needs of Indigenous Australians. Such workshops facilitate Indigenous Australian and peer review of consultancy findings and discussion of crucial policy issues.

In August 2005, CAEPR held a conference on 'Indigenous Socioeconomic Outcomes: Assessing Recent Evidence'. The conference presented the latest evidence on Indigenous economic status, social status, and family and community life in Australia and discussed the implications of such data for government policy. The conference attracted over 250 delegates from around Australia,. The proceedings of this conference are published as CAEPR Research Monograph No. 26.

Recent workshops have been held on Indigenous community organisations and miners (April 2005), Indigenous community governance and government partners (October and December 2005),and the effects of Native Title (November 2005).

Publications Update

CAEPR publishes its research findings initially in the CAEPR Discussion Paper series (ISSN 1036-1774) in both hard copy and electronic format, and also in academic books and journals. To May 2008, some 286 Discussion Papers have been published, and all are available for free download in PDF format.

CAEPR also produces a Research Monograph series (ISSN 1036-6962), now published in both hard copy and electronic format by ANU E Press.

In 1999 the CAEPR Working Paper Series was initiated. This series comprises papers of a more technical nature, which are published online and are available for free download in PDF format.

A full publications list and order forms are available from

Publication Sales,
Centre for Aboriginal Economic Policy Research,
Hanna Neumann Building #21,
Australian National University,
Canberra ACT 0200
Phone (02) 6125 8211  Fax (02) 6125 9730.

CAEPR and the ANU

The Centre enjoys close working relationships with many parts of the University. CAEPR staff present the MAAPD course Development Dilemmas for Indigenous Australians. CAEPR staff regularly provide other guest lectures at the ANU, supervise postgraduate students from other departments, and assist undergraduate and postgraduate students where appropriate.

CAEPR's External Research Links

As well as FACSIA and the Department of Employment and Workplace Relations, CAEPR has close research links with a number of Commonwealth and State government departments and agencies. In Canberra, these include the Australian Bureau of Statistics, Reconciliation Australia, the Commonwealth Grants Commission and the Office of Indigenous Policy Coordination. CAEPR also maintains close links with the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies and the Australian Anthropology Society.

CAEPR has also established academic links with a number of interstate research centres and agencies such as the Social Policy Research Centre at the University of NSW in Sydney, the Bureau of Immigration, Multicultural and Population Research, the Australian Institute of Family Studies in Melbourne, and the Vichealth Koori Health Research and Community Development Unit at the University of Melbourne. In Darwin important research linkages are maintained with the ARC Key Centre for Tropical Wildlife Management, the Tropical Savannas Management CRC and the Centre for Indigenous Natural and Cultural Resource Management, all at Charles Darwin University.

Consultancies

CAEPR has completed commissioned consultancies for agencies such as Land Councils and Native Title Representative Bodies, Australian National Audit Office, ATSIC, Deparment of Employment, Education, Training and Youth Affairs, Australian Bureau of Statistics, Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet, Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission, Bureau of Resource Sciences, Resource Assessment Commission, and Environment Australia.

All consultancies undertaken by CAEPR staff must be approved by the Director and the CAEPR Advisory Committee or its Chairman. Consultancies must be closely associated with CAEPR's overall research objectives and all consultancy outcomes are published either by commissioning agencies or by CAEPR.

Location

The Centre is located in the Hanna Neumann Building #21, Australian National University Campus, Acton, ACT. Click here for a map of the ANU.

Contact

Phone: (02) 6125 0587 (International 61-2-6125 0587)

Fax: (02) 6125 2789 (International 61-2-6125 2789)

Email to Publications Officer: publications.caepr@anu.edu.au

Written enquiries about any matters raised on this site should be addressed to:

Professor Jon Altman
Director
Centre for Aboriginal Economic Policy Research
Hanna Neumann Building #21
The Australian National University
CANBERRA ACT 0200

All enquiries should be addressed to:

Ms Denise Steele
Centre Administrator
Phone: (02) 6125 0587
Fax: (02) 6125 9730