Fire Country: How Indigenous Fire Management Could Help Save Australia

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Hardie Grant Travel, 2020 - Aboriginal Australians - 240 pages
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From the age of 18, Victor Steffensen spent time on country learning traditional Indigenous cultural and ecological knowledge. He quickly realised this knowledge was incredibly well considered, having been developed over many generations of his people living on the land, and that Australia actually needs fire - with burning done in a controlled manner - for land care and healing. Despite much resistance from park rangers and other government officials, Victor came to set up Mulong, a consultancy service offering fire management workshops for uni students and private landholders through to CFA workers, rural fire services and pastoralists. Victor's experiences and stories are told in Fire Country, a book that will highlight the Australian landscape's alarming state of disrepair and devastation, and how revival of Indigenous fire practices could bring ecological health to our country. Much of the knowledge shared in this book is still unknown to western science, but there is much evidence that, if adopted, it will benefit all Australians. In light of recent bushfires across Australia, this book offers practical solutions for better 'reading' country, taking account of current environmental conditions and the ecosystem of each different landscape. Victor says, 'For those who have gone through a trauma [as a result of any bushfire], it is very sensitive. I want to really acknowledge that. But at the end of the day I don't see fear - I see an opportunity.' May we all finally take up that opportunity.

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About the author (2020)

Victor Steffensen is an Indigenous writer, filmmaker, musician and consultant applying traditional knowledge values in a contemporary context, through workshops and artistic projects. He is a descendant of the Tagalaka people through his mother's connections from the Gulf Country of north Queensland. Much of Victor's work over the past 27 years has been based on the arts and reviving traditional knowledge values - particularly traditional burning - through mentoring and leadership, as well as on-ground training with Aboriginal communities and many non-Indigenous Australians. He is also the co-founder of the National Indigenous Fire Workshops, which have so far been hosted in Queensland, New South Wales and Victoria. Victor has also connected with First Nations communities in California, Canada and the Sámi people of Scandinavia, sharing cultural knowledge practices related to caring for country.

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