Publication Details
St Guillaume, L.,
&
Thill, C.
(2018).
An intersection in population control: Welfare reform and indigenous people with a partial capacity to work in the Australian Northern Territory.
Disability and the Global South, 5 (2), 1508-1530.
Abstract
In Australia, in the last decade, there have been significant policy changes to income support payments for people with a disability and Indigenous people. These policy reforms intersect in the experience of Indigenous people with a partial capacity to work in the Northern Territory who are subject to compulsory income management if classified as long-term welfare payment recipients. This intersection is overlooked in existing research and government policy. In this article, we apply intersectionality and Southern disability theory as frameworks to analyse how Indigenous people with a partial capacity to work (PCW) in the Northern Territory are governed under compulsory income management. Whilst the program is theoretically race and ability neutral, in practice it targets specific categories of people because it fails to address the structural and cultural barriers experienced by Indigenous people with a disability and reinscribes disabling and colonising technologies of population control.
Keywords
indigeneity, disability, intersectionality, southern theory, welfare reform
Link to Publisher Version (URL)
https://disabilityglobalsouth.files.wordpress.com/2018/08/dgs_05_02_09.pdf