Emergent sovereignties: Pragmatism, experiment, and affect within collaborative Indigenous wildfire management in southeast Australia | Natural Hazards Research Australia

Emergent sovereignties: Pragmatism, experiment, and affect within collaborative Indigenous wildfire management in southeast Australia

This article examines the resurgence of Indigenous peoples’ presence and knowledge in environmental management in southeast Australia.

Publication type

Journal Article

Published date

05/2025

Author Lachlan Beggs , Timothy Neale , Oliver Costello , Andrea Rawluk , Jack Pascoe , Teagan Shields
Abstract

This article examines the resurgence of Indigenous peoples’ presence and knowledge in environmental management in southeast Australia, a region with an ongoing history of settler colonial dispossession. Drawing on the concept of “survivance”, the article explores the dynamics of intercultural interactions between Indigenous organisations and settler state agencies through a focus on cultural fire management collaborations. These collaborations have grown significantly in scope and number over the past decade – notably in the aftermath of the 2019–2020 Black Summer wildfire season – with partnerships emerging at different scales and supported by different legal and financial arrangements. Based on interviews with Indigenous and non-Indigenous individuals engaged in partnerships at local, regional, and statewide scales, the article reveals the forms of pragmatism, experimentation, and affect that sustain them within a broader settler colonial context. Rather than seeing such formations as co-optative or liberating, the article argues for their crucial importance in understanding Indigenous sovereignty as an emergent practice in tension with the settler state.

Year of Publication
2025
Journal
Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space
Date Published
05/2025
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/251484862513372
Locators Google Scholar | DOI

Related projects

Project
Cultural land management research and governance in south-east Australia