“…This explicit focus on welfare recipients has also been criticised in the broader literature on the basis that it is unfairly stigmatising and is not grounded in evidence (ABS, 2017; Bielefeld, 2018; Campbell, 2015; Cox, 2011; Mendes, Waugh, & Flynn, 2014), but as noted previously, the criteria for such assessments have also been questioned with the argument that the impacts of FRC Act have been differentially experienced by community members (Wyatt, 2019). In relation to Cape York, alcohol is undoubtedly a significant contributor to high levels of interpersonal harm (Clough et al., 2017; Standing Committee on Indigenous Affairs, 2015; Sutton, 2009), but there is no strong evidence that welfare is a mediating factor for alcohol (Staines et al., in press). It has been argued, for example that many of the scourges that Pearson and the Cape York Institute attribute to the rise of welfare from the 1970s onwards, including heavy use of alcohol, in fact long preceded the provision of welfare in these communities (Martin, 1993, 2001; Scott et al., 2018; Watt, 2018).…”