Ostensibly about dingoes and dogs, this paper explores aspects of the contemporary social world of Warlpiri people in the camps of the central Australian settlement of Yuendumu (Northern Territory) through canines. Analyses of dog socialisation, kinds of domestication, and the roles that camp dogs perform (such as protector, family, and witness) provide insights into Warlpiri notions of moral personhood and are employed to reflect about the ethical foundations of how the oppositional categories of Yapa (self, Indigenous, Black, colonised) and Kardiya (other, non-Indigenous, ‘whitefella’, coloniser) are conceptualised.AR
We are lacking of critical research on animal-human relations and cross-species companionship in the...
This study presents a brief inquiry into the human-canine relationship among the Tyvan pastoralists ...
In this thesis I perform a canine-centric reading, within the theoretical frame of Critical Animal S...
The nature of the human-animal bond in contemporary Australian Indigenous communities is little res...
For every Warlpiri myth, fable, or folktale about a child left in camp by its parents while they go ...
Aboriginal people and dogs have a very long association. The archaeological evidence suggests that t...
This paper explores the parallels between racism and speciesism, to argue that the colonial ‘otherin...
This article reviews the established zoonoses from dogs, and identifies the potential burden of spec...
The broad subject of First Nations and decolonial perspectives on animal flourishing is addressed in...
The overpopulation and poor state of dog health in many rural and remote Australian Indigenous commu...
Smith, BP ORCiD: 0000-0002-0873-3917Canids form a large part of Indigenous Australian life and myth-...
India has the highest population of stray dogs in the world1. Dharamsala, a cross-cultural community...
This paper explores concepts of animality found among the Nuaulu of Seram, eastern Indonesia, with s...
Aim. The aim of this article is to analyse Aboriginal myths and discover the relationship between an...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final ...
We are lacking of critical research on animal-human relations and cross-species companionship in the...
This study presents a brief inquiry into the human-canine relationship among the Tyvan pastoralists ...
In this thesis I perform a canine-centric reading, within the theoretical frame of Critical Animal S...
The nature of the human-animal bond in contemporary Australian Indigenous communities is little res...
For every Warlpiri myth, fable, or folktale about a child left in camp by its parents while they go ...
Aboriginal people and dogs have a very long association. The archaeological evidence suggests that t...
This paper explores the parallels between racism and speciesism, to argue that the colonial ‘otherin...
This article reviews the established zoonoses from dogs, and identifies the potential burden of spec...
The broad subject of First Nations and decolonial perspectives on animal flourishing is addressed in...
The overpopulation and poor state of dog health in many rural and remote Australian Indigenous commu...
Smith, BP ORCiD: 0000-0002-0873-3917Canids form a large part of Indigenous Australian life and myth-...
India has the highest population of stray dogs in the world1. Dharamsala, a cross-cultural community...
This paper explores concepts of animality found among the Nuaulu of Seram, eastern Indonesia, with s...
Aim. The aim of this article is to analyse Aboriginal myths and discover the relationship between an...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final ...
We are lacking of critical research on animal-human relations and cross-species companionship in the...
This study presents a brief inquiry into the human-canine relationship among the Tyvan pastoralists ...
In this thesis I perform a canine-centric reading, within the theoretical frame of Critical Animal S...