Javascript must be enabled to continue!
‘Hard Yakka’: Living With a Disability in the West Kimberley
View through CrossRef
<p>This report investigates the lived experiences of Aboriginal people with disabilities living in the West Kimberley region of Western Australia, covered by the local government shires of Broome and Derby–West Kimberley. The major population centres in the West Kimberley are the towns of Broome, Derby and Fitzroy Crossing. Both local government areas have low populations scattered across vast areas with poor infrastructure and under-developed built environments, which make travel and daily living especially challenging. The town of Broome is located 2,230 kilometres north of Perth; Derby is 2,383 kilometres and Fitzroy Crossing more than 2,500 kilometres to the north-east (Shire of Broome, 2014; Shire of Derby–West Kimberley, 2014). Broome Shire has a resident population of 15,857 people living in an area covering 56,000 square kilometres (Shire of Broome, 2014). Derby–West Kimberley has 8,941 inhabitants living in an area of 118,560 square kilometres (Shire of Derby–West Kimberley, 2014). The region has a large Aboriginal population. Between one-third and one-half of the population is of Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander origin (Shire of Broome, 2014; Shire of Derby–West Kimberley, 2014). There are over 100 Aboriginal communities of various population sizes throughout the region and nearly 100 properties servicing the pastoral industry. The West Kimberley has a diverse economy, with mining, tourism, agriculture and pearling, all of which are major contributors to the economic output of the area. Geographically, the region has very diverse terrain and geographical features from arid desert areas, gorges and river valleys to long pristine coastlines, highly developed coastal resorts and beaches, in addition to extensive rainforest areas and cave systems (Shire of Broome, 2014; Shire of Derby–West Kimberley, 2014). Both Shires have significant transportation challenges during the cyclone season, between November and April each year. The ‘great wet’ leads to road closures with the majority of roads being unsealed, gravel or unformed (Shire of Broome, 2014; Shire of Derby–West Kimberley, 2014). This makes travel impossible without access to off-road or four-wheel drive vehicles, further isolating remote communities and restricting access to health, education and other services, including disability support services.</p>
Title: ‘Hard Yakka’: Living With a Disability in the West Kimberley
Description:
<p>This report investigates the lived experiences of Aboriginal people with disabilities living in the West Kimberley region of Western Australia, covered by the local government shires of Broome and Derby–West Kimberley.
The major population centres in the West Kimberley are the towns of Broome, Derby and Fitzroy Crossing.
Both local government areas have low populations scattered across vast areas with poor infrastructure and under-developed built environments, which make travel and daily living especially challenging.
The town of Broome is located 2,230 kilometres north of Perth; Derby is 2,383 kilometres and Fitzroy Crossing more than 2,500 kilometres to the north-east (Shire of Broome, 2014; Shire of Derby–West Kimberley, 2014).
Broome Shire has a resident population of 15,857 people living in an area covering 56,000 square kilometres (Shire of Broome, 2014).
Derby–West Kimberley has 8,941 inhabitants living in an area of 118,560 square kilometres (Shire of Derby–West Kimberley, 2014).
The region has a large Aboriginal population.
Between one-third and one-half of the population is of Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander origin (Shire of Broome, 2014; Shire of Derby–West Kimberley, 2014).
There are over 100 Aboriginal communities of various population sizes throughout the region and nearly 100 properties servicing the pastoral industry.
The West Kimberley has a diverse economy, with mining, tourism, agriculture and pearling, all of which are major contributors to the economic output of the area.
Geographically, the region has very diverse terrain and geographical features from arid desert areas, gorges and river valleys to long pristine coastlines, highly developed coastal resorts and beaches, in addition to extensive rainforest areas and cave systems (Shire of Broome, 2014; Shire of Derby–West Kimberley, 2014).
Both Shires have significant transportation challenges during the cyclone season, between November and April each year.
The ‘great wet’ leads to road closures with the majority of roads being unsealed, gravel or unformed (Shire of Broome, 2014; Shire of Derby–West Kimberley, 2014).
This makes travel impossible without access to off-road or four-wheel drive vehicles, further isolating remote communities and restricting access to health, education and other services, including disability support services.
</p>.
Related Results
‘Hard Yakka’: Living With a Disability in the West Kimberley
‘Hard Yakka’: Living With a Disability in the West Kimberley
<p>This report investigates the lived experiences of Aboriginal people with disabilities living in the West Kimberley region of Western Australia, covered by the local govern...
Disability Studies
Disability Studies
This article brings together key texts and theorists from disability studies, which is a growing and vibrant inter/multidisciplinary field. It is an area of inquiry that has been e...
A Discussion of the Treatment of People with an Intellectual Disability Across Healthcare and the Modernization of Learning Disability Nursing
A Discussion of the Treatment of People with an Intellectual Disability Across Healthcare and the Modernization of Learning Disability Nursing
Aims: A discussion of the treatment of people with an intellectual disability across healthcare and the modernisation of learning disability nursing.
Background: Health inequalitie...
Unveiling the Disability A Study of Social Discrimination in Contemporary American Memoires
Unveiling the Disability A Study of Social Discrimination in Contemporary American Memoires
The study aims to explore social discrimination as experienced by disabled persons and depicted in contemporary American memoirs by the disabled person. It investigates the effects...
Food Studies and Disability Justice
Food Studies and Disability Justice
Robust scholarship at the intersection of disability studies and food studies is rare. Disability scholars who study and write about experiences of disabled people in relation to f...
The functional disability of the elderly in tambon Krabi-noi Muang district, Krabi province, Thailand
The functional disability of the elderly in tambon Krabi-noi Muang district, Krabi province, Thailand
This research investigates the functional disability of the elderly residents of Tambon Krabi-noi, Muang district, Krabi province in 2005 and aims to explore (1) the prevalence of ...
Where Is Disability in Global Public Health?
Where Is Disability in Global Public Health?
Accounting for about 15% of the world’s population, persons with disabilities constitute a critical population. Despite a substantial knowledge base in disability and public health...
Severe disability and its prevalence and causes in northwestern Ethiopia: evidence from Dabat district of Amhara National Regional State. A community based cross-sectional study
Severe disability and its prevalence and causes in northwestern Ethiopia: evidence from Dabat district of Amhara National Regional State. A community based cross-sectional study
Abstract
Background: Disability is the social outcome of unfavorable interactions between individuals’ impairments, on the one hand, and inaccessible physical spaces, disen...


