QUT Indigenous Research and Engagement Unit | Businesses
QUT Indigenous Research and Engagement Unit
Phone: (07) 3138 8611
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24.01.2022 #CallForPapers for #NAISA2020 in Toronto/Tkaronto, Canada. Tkaronto has been home of Haudenosaunee and Anishinaabe peoples since time immemorial and part of the original homelands of the Wendat people. NAISA invites people to the NAISA 2020 meeting in Tkaronto, a place that is both lands and waters. The NAISA Council invites all persons working in Native American and Indigenous Studies to submit proposals for: Individual papers, panel sessions, roundtables, or creative works/...film screenings. They welcome proposals from faculty and students in colleges, universities, and tribal colleges; from community-based scholars and elders; and from professionals working in the field. They encourage proposals relating to Indigenous community-driven scholarship. The deadline for proposal submissions is November 1, 2019, 11:59 pm EST. #Indigenous #Research #HigherEducation
21.01.2022 The latest issue of Link-Up (QLD) is available for July-August 2019. Read and share stories from recent reunions and find out about the latest events and announcements from the Link-Up team and from the local Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Community. #Indigenous
10.01.2022 #IJCIS Early Release article: "Visions of TII Yahda" - Michaela McGuire (Simon Fraser University). Before contact, Indigenous peoples had their own notions of justice and ways of responding to wrongdoing. However, these systems have been repressed by colonial forces and imposed governance. The present research utilised semi-structured interviews with a diverse group of Haida people who shared their insights into visions of a Haida justice system (HJS). The guiding research qu...estions included: What does justice mean to Haida people? What do Haida people envision in terms of Haida justice? What could some potential first steps be towards Haida Justice? The IJCIS offers an early release of articles that have been through the peer-review process and have been accepted for publication, copyedited and typeset. Authors are able to share an early release version of their publication without waiting for the scheduled production of a whole issue. #Research #Indigenous #HigherEducation
10.01.2022 Call For Proposals - Australian and New Zealand Studies Association of North America (ANZSANA) ANZSANA invites scholars, graduate students, professionals, writers, and artists to submit papers and roundtable discussions to its 27th annual conference which will take place in Mexico, Puerto Vallarta. ANZSANA welcomes proposals on any aspect of Australian or New Zealand as well as studies that analyze Australia or New Zealand from a comparative perspective. Since its founding in... 1989, ANZSANA has promoted interdisciplinary research, and it continues to encourage proposals that bridge traditional divides between disciplines as well as those that employ diverse approaches. Areas of inquiry include, but are not limited to, the following: Political Science and International Relations History Geography, Sociology and Anthropology Law Gender Studies Indigenous Studies Literature Visual and Performing Arts Communication and Culture Business and Economics Pedagogy Ecology and Environmental Sciences A limited number of small travel grants are available for graduate student participation. Deadline for submission is November 3, 2019. #Research #HigherEducation #Indigenous
05.01.2022 #IJCIS Early Release article: "Intergenerational influences of hunger and community violence on the Aboriginal people of Western Australia: A review" by Dr Francesca Robertson (ECU), Dr David Coall (ECU/UWA), Dr Dan McAullay (UWA) and Alison Nannup (ECU). There is a consensus in the literature that hunger and community violence inaugurates adverse health impacts for survivors and for their descendants. The studied cohorts do not include Western Australian Aboriginal people, a...lthough many experienced violence and famine conditions as late as the 1970s. This article describes the pathways and intergenerational impacts of studied cohorts and applies these to the contemporary Western Australian context. The authors found that the intergenerational impacts, compounded by linguistic trauma, may be a contributor to current health issues experienced by Aboriginal people, but these are also contributing to the resurgence in population numbers. The IJCIS offers an early release of articles that have been through the peer-review process and have been accepted for publication, copyedited and typeset. Authors are able to share an early release version of their publication without waiting for the scheduled production of a whole issue. #Research #Indigenous #HigherEducation
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