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Summary report: Deficit discourse and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health policy

Discover how deficit discourse shapes Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health policy, and pathways toward more strengths-based approaches to health

Race discrimination Policy

Summary

This summary report unpacks the terms 'deficit discourse' and 'strengths-based approach', particularly as they relate to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health policy.

About the resource

As noted in the resource:

‘While we might think of discourse as ‘just language’, research has shown that it is inseparable from our understandings of the world and how we act. As such, discourse plays a fundamental role in resource and power inequalities.

Deficit discourse regarding Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people operates across a range of intersecting fields including health and education; it circulates in policy, media, everyday conversations, and beyond. Media and political discourses often operate in tandem, reproducing negative discourses about Aboriginal and Torres Straits Islander people.

There is evidence deficit discourse has real-world outcomes for identity formation, educational attainment, health and wellbeing. It contributes to forms of external and internalised racism.’

Link to the resource

Link to deficit discourse resource.

The views expressed by organisations and in resources in this hub do not necessarily reflect the views of the Australian Human Rights Commission or There's nothing casual about racism campaign supporters and partners.

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