Bibliography
Filters: Author is Walsh, F [Clear All Filters]
(2008). Respecting Aboriginal people and their knowledge:Protocols for people involved in commercial bush foods enterprises, research and development with produce and knowledge from Central Australia.
Desert Knowledge Symposium 2008 - Developing Desert Directions: Rethinking the Future.
(2008). Aboriginal employment at the Alice Springs Desert Park: roles and processes in cultural – natural resource management.
Invited presentation to Indigenous Education and Employment Taskforce.
(2009). To hunt and to hold: Martu Aboriginal people's uses and knowledge of their country, with implications for co-management in Karlamilyi (Rudall River) National Park and the Great Sandy Desert, Western Australia.
Anthropology and Plant Biology. Doctor of Philosophy, 476.
(2011). No bush foods without people: the essential human dimension to the sustainability of trade in native plant products from desert Australia .
The Rangeland Journal. 33, 395-416.
(2011). Our work is about learning, colleagues, culture and place: Aboriginal employment at the Alice Springs Desert Park.
DKCRC Research Report. 72,
(2006). How have businesses that buy bush foods from Aboriginal harvesters in central Australia been sustainable?.
Sustainability of Indigenous Communities Conference.
(2009). Sustainable bush produce systems: Progress Report 2004-2006.
DKCRC Working Paper. 31, 82.
(2009). Patterns of accessing variable resources across time and space: desert plants, animals and people.
Journal of Arid Environments . 73, 338-346.
(2007). Commercial harvest and sale of bushfoods in central Australia.
International Geographical Association Conference.
(2006). Wild harvest, desert indigenous benefit & the bush foods industry.
International Geographical Union Congress.
(2006). Aboriginal perspectives on the emerging bush food industry in central Australia..
Desert Knowledge Symposium and Business Showcase 2006 - Global Desert Opportunities..
(2008). Research governance - convening the Merne Altyerr-ipenhe (Food from the Creation time) Reference Group.
(, Ed.).Indigenous community engagement at Charles Darwin University. 36-37.
(2009). Australian harvest: installation display on bush food processes and products from central Australia, National Symbols of Australia gallery, Feeding the Nation exhibition.
2 metre x 2 metre: Text, art and object installation on display from 2006-2009.
(2009). Anpernirrentye (Relationships between people, plants, laws and all things): Arrernte values in landscapes and iconic bush food species.
Society for Ecological Restoration International (SERI) World Conference on Ecological Restoration. Abstract
(2008). Anperrentye: Relationships between Bush foods, Creation, Laws, People, Country and All things, illustrated by three plant species.
Desert Knowledge Symposium 2008 - Developing Desert Directions: Rethinking the Future.
(2010). Livelihoods inLand: promoting health and wellbeing outcomes from desert Aboriginal land management.
DKCRC Research Report. 78,
(2008). Jobs and livelihoods – ways forward for ‘being on country’.
Desert Knowledge Symposium 2008 - Developing Desert Directions: Rethinking the Future.
(2011). Attention to four key principles can promote health outcomes from desert Aboriginal land management.
The Rangeland Journal. 33, 395-416.
(2009). Angka Akatyerr-akert: A Desert raisin report.
Community report.

