Accounting for Cultural Capital—Sustainability Agenda of Charities Serving the First Nations People towards Self-Determination—Evidence from the Northern Territory, Australia

This study examined the role of the First Nations beneficiary charities in contributing to the 17 United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in the Northern Territory, Australia, as a way of attaining self-determination by closing the expectations gap between First Nations people and the ma...

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Published in:Sustainability
Main Author: Indra Abeysekera
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3390/su14020949
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author Indra Abeysekera
author_facet Indra Abeysekera
author_sort Indra Abeysekera
collection MDPI Open Access Publishing
container_issue 2
container_start_page 949
container_title Sustainability
container_volume 14
description This study examined the role of the First Nations beneficiary charities in contributing to the 17 United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in the Northern Territory, Australia, as a way of attaining self-determination by closing the expectations gap between First Nations people and the mainstream Australians. Informed by the theory of self-determination (ethical and functional strands), a latent content analysis of 118 charities serving the First Nations people was conducted, coding the summary of their activities to ascertain their strategic engagement with the SDGs. A network analysis was also carried out to examine the charities’ connections with each other and their collective contribution towards the SDGs. The findings show that charities contribute to creating cultural capital through social capital, followed by intellectual capital dimensions. However, charities contributed little to building environmental capital dimension of the First Nations people. This study examined charities’ engagement with SDGs to build cultural capital in furtherance of self-determination of Australia’s First Nations people.
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spelling ftmdpi:oai:mdpi.com:/2071-1050/14/2/949/ 2025-01-16T21:53:15+00:00 Accounting for Cultural Capital—Sustainability Agenda of Charities Serving the First Nations People towards Self-Determination—Evidence from the Northern Territory, Australia Indra Abeysekera agris 2022-01-14 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.3390/su14020949 EN eng Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute Sustainable Management https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su14020949 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Sustainability; Volume 14; Issue 2; Pages: 949 Australia charities cultural capital environmental capital intellectual capital Northern Territory self-determination social capital sustainability reporting United Nations Sustainable Development Goals Text 2022 ftmdpi https://doi.org/10.3390/su14020949 2023-08-01T03:50:34Z This study examined the role of the First Nations beneficiary charities in contributing to the 17 United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in the Northern Territory, Australia, as a way of attaining self-determination by closing the expectations gap between First Nations people and the mainstream Australians. Informed by the theory of self-determination (ethical and functional strands), a latent content analysis of 118 charities serving the First Nations people was conducted, coding the summary of their activities to ascertain their strategic engagement with the SDGs. A network analysis was also carried out to examine the charities’ connections with each other and their collective contribution towards the SDGs. The findings show that charities contribute to creating cultural capital through social capital, followed by intellectual capital dimensions. However, charities contributed little to building environmental capital dimension of the First Nations people. This study examined charities’ engagement with SDGs to build cultural capital in furtherance of self-determination of Australia’s First Nations people. Text First Nations MDPI Open Access Publishing Sustainability 14 2 949
spellingShingle Australia
charities
cultural capital
environmental capital
intellectual capital
Northern Territory
self-determination
social capital
sustainability reporting
United Nations Sustainable Development Goals
Indra Abeysekera
Accounting for Cultural Capital—Sustainability Agenda of Charities Serving the First Nations People towards Self-Determination—Evidence from the Northern Territory, Australia
title Accounting for Cultural Capital—Sustainability Agenda of Charities Serving the First Nations People towards Self-Determination—Evidence from the Northern Territory, Australia
title_full Accounting for Cultural Capital—Sustainability Agenda of Charities Serving the First Nations People towards Self-Determination—Evidence from the Northern Territory, Australia
title_fullStr Accounting for Cultural Capital—Sustainability Agenda of Charities Serving the First Nations People towards Self-Determination—Evidence from the Northern Territory, Australia
title_full_unstemmed Accounting for Cultural Capital—Sustainability Agenda of Charities Serving the First Nations People towards Self-Determination—Evidence from the Northern Territory, Australia
title_short Accounting for Cultural Capital—Sustainability Agenda of Charities Serving the First Nations People towards Self-Determination—Evidence from the Northern Territory, Australia
title_sort accounting for cultural capital—sustainability agenda of charities serving the first nations people towards self-determination—evidence from the northern territory, australia
topic Australia
charities
cultural capital
environmental capital
intellectual capital
Northern Territory
self-determination
social capital
sustainability reporting
United Nations Sustainable Development Goals
topic_facet Australia
charities
cultural capital
environmental capital
intellectual capital
Northern Territory
self-determination
social capital
sustainability reporting
United Nations Sustainable Development Goals
url https://doi.org/10.3390/su14020949