Taylor, A., Carson, D. B., Carson, D. A., & Brokensha, H. (2015). ‘Walkabout’ tourism: The Indigenous tourism market for Outback Australia. Journal Of Hospitality And Tourism Management249-17. doi:10.1016/j.jhtm.2015.04.002

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O'Kane, M. (2013). Laws, Customs, and Practices in Australian Native Title. Collaborative Anthropologies, (1), 334.

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Prout, S. (2008). On the move? Indigenous temporary mobility practices in Australia. Centre for Aboriginal Economic Policy Research, (48), 1-30. Retrieved November 2, 2015, from http://caepr.anu.edu.au/sites/default/files/Publications/WP/CAEPRWP48.pdf

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Walkabout refers to a Rite of passage during which Indigenous male Australians would undergo a journey during adolescence and live in the wilderness for a period as long as six months to make the spiritual and traditional transition into manhood. Walkabout has come to be referred to as temporary mobility for its original name has been used as a derogatory term in Australian culture, demeaning its spiritual significance.

What is Walkabout

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The term ‘walkabout’ is commonly used to characterize Indigenous people as highly mobile over the short-term, and such movement is regularly constructed as problematic for mainstream institutions such as health care and housing programs. In the case of Indigenous Australia, life-cycle stages, such as traditional rites of passage, seem to influence the motivations for movement more than the frequency of movement.

But to non-aboriginal employers who did not fully understand the abrupt leaving and returning as a valid reason for missing work. The reasons for leaving may be more mundane than originally thought: workers who wanted or needed to attend a ceremony or visit relatives did not accept employers' control over such matters. [2]

What is Temporary Mobility

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Temporary mobility is any form of territorial movement that does not represent a permanent or lasting change of usual residence that includes a significant amount of movement for religious observance in pre-modern and early transitional societies, or walkabout. Walkabout has come to be referred to as a form of temporary mobility due to its characteristics of time and place. Young adults have the highest mobility rate of all age groups in Australia; with males making up the majority of the rate.

Common educational literature obtained through research clearly identified a peak in temporary mobility among young adults. This is the period of life when many Indigenous youth are exploring and contesting their identities in relation to the state and their cultural context to their traditional ties. The peak of mobility in young adults in Australia is tied to the traditional rite of passage of walkabout, for young adulthood is the time in which aboriginal youth would be taking walkabout to make the transition into adulthood.

Research on Temporary Mobility

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There is no consistency to research on temporary mobility for the format of the current research conducted has been structured to result in the answers the researchers need. Mobility as a topic of research is difficult to track and measure. In present research, professionals have identified technology as being a factor of current mobility in young adults in Australia. However, no formal, sound research has been conducted on this subject matter specifically. The lack of female presence in research results has determined that Australian women participate in the national census less than their male counterparts leading to the underrepresentation of women in mobility research. This underrepresentation in research is due to the fact that most mobility research relies highly on the census as its primary form of data collection. The Australian census occurs on one night nationally, the occurance of the census makes it difficult to track mobility as does the finding that women in Australia are typically out of their usual residence at night, also leading to the underrepresentation of women in research.

Currently, any form of government statistical measures are not able to provide any detailed indication of the frequency, volume, or direction of Indigenous temporary mobility. They are unable to provide any sort of consistent statistics for the frequency in which the indigenous aboriginals travel make any previous statistics out of date. Although mobility has been a central feature of Indigenous lived experience for thousands of years, non-Indigenous attempts to understand and conceptualize it through time have been unsuccessful as well as being few and far between.

Public Perception of Walkabout/Temporary Mobility

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Indigenous temporary mobility practices remain poorly understood within mainstream Australian society. They are often explained away as simply the product of a nomadic predisposition to wander aimlessly. A general lack in understanding of Walkabout, or temporal mobility, on the direction, purpose, length of the trip, those that participate, and the activities that take place on the trip has grown substantially over time, creating some friction between aboriginal Australian residents participating in Walkabout and those that are not.

This lack of understanding and the friction caused led to the term “walkabout” being used in a derogatory manner and being used to explain unplanned and unexplainable trips in the Outback. Those that participate in walkabout, typically aboriginals from the Outback areas, have been labelled as transients, nomads, or drifters. These movements are often mystifying for the general public of non-aboriginal Australian’s because they appear unplanned and unpredictable in duration. The mystifying nature of walkabout and temporary mobility in the indigenous has led to the negative connotation of their travels. Walkabout can be used to imply a kind of aimless and erratic wandering off into the unknown to those that do not fully understand its true meaning in the aboriginal spirituality and faith.

Aboriginal endosociality has been considered to be partly a product of the same racism that gave rise to the myth of walkabout as a derogatory term but it is also a product of the distinctive indigenous culture its emphasis on the relational constitution of the person and the importance of place in the constitution of personal identity. Together these factors continue to underwrite frequent mobility in the Aboriginal domain in Australia.

The potential rise for the complexity of temporary mobility of traditional origins within modernization is prevalent in current Australian society for the transition of Indigenous cultures from traditional activities toward modernity has given rise to growing recognition of the importance of traditional practices. The idea that there may be other more contemporary factors in temporary mobility alters the course of research conducted.

The explanation for indigenous temporary mobility in and around remote Australia is due to the strong spiritual ties of the indigenous people to the land of the Outback. With modernization occurring all across Australia, walkabout will occur in more remote areas such as the outback to create a break from modern culture in order to create a connection with traditional, spiritual roots. Interior Australia (Outback) benefits from the temporary mobility that occurs in those areas due to the lack of permanent residents in those areas. The spiritual attachment of aboriginals to the land of the Outback was a strong, unbreakable force that rooted social groups within their traditional territories.

Aboriginal Australians make up the majority of the population in the Outback up to 90% in some areas. The Outback covers more than three quarters of Australia’s landmass. Indigenous temporary mobility’s that are characterized by familial and cultural obligations and conflicts. They are intentionally confined within Australian territories of ancestral belonging, typically in the Outback. These periods of mobility are typically ceremonial.  These periods of mobility are unrelated to and often unseen by mainstream Australia not of aboriginal, indigenous beliefs. They often reflect and show disinterest in, or alienation from, the state.

The physical geography of the Australian Outback has fundamentally shaped Indigenous socio-spatial organization, and thus mobility practices, for the lack of population density in these areas and the uncharted aura of these areas, it is not uncommon that the Outback is the typical home to walkabout for aboriginals have ancestral ties to the land. For Indigenous people in Central Australia, mobility was embedded in cultural practice as people’s ceremonial journeys—Walkabout---followed dreaming tracks that linked sacred sites. These sites were often water sources or resource-rich places becoming important economically as well as spiritually.