KJ News
A new digital app is underway – a key tactic to record and pass on warrarnmili ninti
The development of a digital app for Martu to use on country is currently underway! As Martu travel country, this app is planned to show the names and locations of kalyu (waterholes) and share the stories and histories of Martu elders.
Martu continue their bilby research, asking Wanja Mankarr? – to assess threats, habitat, and food sources
KJ ranger teams have been carrying out mankarr (bilby) surveys as part of the mankarr monitoring project. This work, over time, will monitor population size, distribution and assess habitat health.
Quolls in the Western Desert
The detection of a quoll in 2012 in Karlamilyi National Park – about 200 kilometres away from other known records – prompted DBCA researchers and KJ Martu Rangers to broaden the search for quolls in the Great Sandy Desert. What they’ve found indicates quolls occur far more extensively than first thought.
BHP chief Andrew Mackenzie leads business backing for Indigenous voice to parliament
BHP chief executive Andrew Mackenzie will throw his support behind a constitutionally enshrined Indigenous "voice" to parliament on Thursday in a landmark speech designed to build support from the business community.
Aboriginal Hunters’ Fires Help Restore an Australian Desert
A study of how the Martu shaped their land presents an example where humans seem to benefit an environment perceived as wilderness.
'Get on with it': Rio boss urges Indigenous recognition
The Australian boss of mining giant Rio Tinto, Joanne Farrell, says it is time for Australia to "get on with it" and deliver constitutional recognition for Indigenous Australians.
Rio Tinto is one of the biggest employers of Indigenous people in Australia, with the miner employing more than 1500 Indigenous people as well as hundreds more as contractors.
Martu women hope for more people to return to country
MARTU WOMEN CALL FOR MORE PEOPLE TO RETURN TO COUNTRY
Martu students fly 1,500km to boarding school for valuable vocational education
A remote community in Western Australia is equipping students for the future through an independent teaching program at home, and by sending senior students to a boarding school 1,500 kilometres away for vocational training.
Remote clinics offer better health and happiness on the edge of the western desert
Two new state-of-the-art health centres in the Western Australia's east Pilbara will deliver new services to western desert Indigenous communities.
Mock court sessions help Indigenous offenders understand how justice system works
Imagine being in a foreign country where you cannot speak the language, then being arrested and tried in court for something you cannot understand, and being thrown into prison hundreds of kilometres away from your family.