Indigenous knowledge can challenge liberal and anthropocentric definitions of water as human property. In this article, I examine the close relationship of Indigenous people with their waterscapes as portrayed in the Australian feature film Ten Canoes
Cultural, social and more-than-human approaches to nature research are largely held apart in the dis...
The water debate in Australia has expanded to include environmental protection, adaptive management ...
International audienceMany Indigenous groups in Australia refer to themselves as “saltwater people”....
Indigenous knowledge can challenge liberal and anthropocentric definitions of water as human propert...
The awarded film Ten Canoes (2006) broke new ground in the cinematic representation of Indigenous Au...
Scholars around the world are increasingly taking up the imperative of the Anthropocene to develop n...
This article addresses Indigenous Australian claims to water resources and how they inform and relat...
Focusing on water resources this paper traces the conceptual relationships between the formal charac...
This dissertation focuses on the thesis question, What is our human relationship with water? It expl...
In a reading of the Rolf de Heer film Ten Canoes this article explores the pervasive, contemporary c...
Governments grapple with ways to integrate diverse values and interests to inform water management t...
The multi-dimensional relationships that Indigenous peoples have with water are only recently gainin...
Right across Australia, indigenous people hold water to be sacred Their management of their use of f...
This thesis critically describes the phenomenon of Aboriginal tied-bark canoe making within the high...
This qualitative study uses Indigenous storywork as a form of personally situated, decolonial resear...
Cultural, social and more-than-human approaches to nature research are largely held apart in the dis...
The water debate in Australia has expanded to include environmental protection, adaptive management ...
International audienceMany Indigenous groups in Australia refer to themselves as “saltwater people”....
Indigenous knowledge can challenge liberal and anthropocentric definitions of water as human propert...
The awarded film Ten Canoes (2006) broke new ground in the cinematic representation of Indigenous Au...
Scholars around the world are increasingly taking up the imperative of the Anthropocene to develop n...
This article addresses Indigenous Australian claims to water resources and how they inform and relat...
Focusing on water resources this paper traces the conceptual relationships between the formal charac...
This dissertation focuses on the thesis question, What is our human relationship with water? It expl...
In a reading of the Rolf de Heer film Ten Canoes this article explores the pervasive, contemporary c...
Governments grapple with ways to integrate diverse values and interests to inform water management t...
The multi-dimensional relationships that Indigenous peoples have with water are only recently gainin...
Right across Australia, indigenous people hold water to be sacred Their management of their use of f...
This thesis critically describes the phenomenon of Aboriginal tied-bark canoe making within the high...
This qualitative study uses Indigenous storywork as a form of personally situated, decolonial resear...
Cultural, social and more-than-human approaches to nature research are largely held apart in the dis...
The water debate in Australia has expanded to include environmental protection, adaptive management ...
International audienceMany Indigenous groups in Australia refer to themselves as “saltwater people”....