Displaying results 2321 to 2330 of 2610.
Diana Perche is Senior Lecturer in Social Research and Policy at the University of New South Wales. Diana’s research focuses on the participation of First Nations people in Australian politics and policy-making, and on how Australian governments use evidence and ideology to design public policy affecting or targeting Indigenous people.
Associate Professor Sally K. May is an ARC Future Fellow with the School of Humanities at the University of Adelaide and an adjunct Research Fellow with the Griffith Centre for Social and Cultural Research, Griffith University, Queensland. Her interdisciplinary research focuses on relationships between people, landscapes, material culture and imagery.
Professor Jo McDonald FAHA MAACAI is the Director of the Centre for Rock Art Research + Management at the University of Western Australia. She has developed numerous collaborative research partnerships focused around rock art with Aboriginal communities in the Western Desert and Pilbara that link custodians and their ranger groups, mythological narratives and rock art.
Distinguished Professor Paul S.C. Taçon FAHA FSA FQA is a past ARC Australian Laureate Fellow (2016–2021) and Chair in Rock Art Research at Griffith University, Queensland. Since 1980, he has conducted archaeological and ethnographic fieldwork across Australia, Southeast Asia and elsewhere, leading to over 310 academic and popular publications.
Dr Ursula K. Frederick is a Research Fellow at the Centre for Creative and Cultural Research, University of Canberra. She has a background in art history, archaeology and visual arts. In addition to rock art, Ursula’s research embraces the archaeology of art, inscription and other mark-making activities, including graffiti.
Nicholas Halter is an Australian historian who has lived and worked in Micronesia and Fiji. Born in Sydney, he studied history at the University of Wollongong and The Australian National University. Since 2016, he has lectured in Pacific history and historiography at the University of the South Pacific in Fiji.
The Made in China Journal (MIC) is a publication focusing on labour, civil society and human rights in China. It is founded on the belief that spreading awareness of the complexities and nuances underpinning socioeconomic change in contemporary Chinese society is important, especially considering
Humanities Research is a peer-reviewed, open access, annual journal that promotes outstanding innovative, interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary scholarship to advance critical knowledge about the human world and society. The journal is co-published by the Humanities Research Centre, The
Dr R.J. May is an emeritus fellow of The Australian National University, attached to the Department of Pacific Affairs. He was formerly a senior economist with the Reserve Bank of Australia, foundation director of the National Research Institute of Papua New Guinea and head of the Department of Political and Social Change, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies at The Australian National University. In 1976 he was awarded the Independence Medal for his service to banking and research in Papua New Guinea.
Christiane Gerblinger is a Visiting Fellow and graduate co-convenor of ‘Science, Technology and Public Policy’ at the Centre for the Public Awareness of Science at The Australian National University in Canberra. An alum of Australia’s prestigious Sir Roland Wilson scholarship, Christiane completed a PhD on the language of rejected policy advice in 2021, a PhD in Gothic science fiction in 2000, and a BA (Hons) in literature in 1995. In between, she worked in a range of public sector roles, including as a senior policy adviser on counter-proliferation, data, energy, health and rural policy and as a speechwriter in an economic portfolio.