Green Ribbon and Blue Ribbon Stories: Applying a Bidjara Way of Knowing to Understanding Records

Keywords: Bidjara, Green ribbon and blue ribbon stories, Provenance, Traditional Knowledge attribution, Appraisal, Traditional Knowledge ownership

Abstract

Archival turn scholars have argued that to understand a record one needs to consider its broader provenance. Theoretical and conceptual frameworks such as the record continuum model, parallel provenance and societal provenance have aided in debunking the myth of linear, objective and neutral records. While these theories and concepts support the inclusion of Indigenous worldviews in recordkeeping praxis, Indigenous worldviews have been noticeably absent in the formulation of these and other archival theorisations. This article introduces the green ribbon and blue ribbon stories, an Indigenous, specifically Bidjara, conceptual framework for appraising and interpreting archival records. This conceptual framework has been derived from Bidjara ways of being and knowing. This article consists of three parts: the first introduces the conceptual framework and explains its background. The second discusses the intellectual and cultural authority of the framework and protocols for its use, and the final part of the article demonstrates how the green ribbon and blue ribbon stories’ conceptual framework applies to archives.

Author Biographies

Leann Wilson, Regional Economic Solutions, Brisbane, Australia
Co-founder, Regional Economic Solutions

Leann Wilson is a descendant of the Thompson family of the Bidjara/Kara-Kara and South Sea Islander peoples. She grew up with her Thompson family in and around Barcaldine on Bidjara Country. Leann is the co-founder of Regional Economic Solutions that support Indigenous communities, governments and businesses nationally to broker understanding and co-design agreements. Leann also co-designed the award-winning Building on the strength of our stories training that teaches Queensland history through the lens of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander lived experience affected by the successive Queensland legislation that impacted Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. Leann’s work spans community, government, not-for-profit, education and private enterprise.

https://www.linkedin.com/in/leann-wilson-a79b323b/

Rose Barrowcliffe, Department of Indigenous Studies Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia
Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Centre for Global Indigenous Futures, Macquarie University

Rose Barrowcliffe is a Butchulla postdoctoral research fellow at Department of Indigenous Studies and the Centre for Global Indigenous Futures. Rose’s research examines the representation of Indigenous peoples in archives at both an organisational level and record level. Rose is the inaugural First Nations Archives Advisor to the Queensland State Archives and is an active member of the Indigenous Archives Collective.

Twitter: @BarrowcliffeR

https://www.linkedin.com/in/rose-barrowcliffe/

Published
2023-06-07
How to Cite
Wilson L. and Barrowcliffe R. (2023) “Green Ribbon and Blue Ribbon Stories: Applying a Bidjara Way of Knowing to Understanding Records”, Archives & Manuscripts, 50(2), pp. 43-59. doi: 10.37683/asa.v50.10921.
Section
Articles