Brave New Welcome is the title of a short film, and a project, which was driven by a diverse group of young people who engaged with arts practices such as playback theatre, visual and media arts, and who worked with a range of professionals to develop their own response to the issue of how young people from refugee backgrounds are welcomed in Brisbane. Film Description on Vimeo: In January 2014, at a time when Australia is full of messages of ‘unwelcome’, a group of 20 young people from diverse backgrounds came together in Brisbane. We asked, ‘What does it take to make friends with people who are really different from ourselves?’ We told stories using music, playback theatre and community café dialogue. Our experience was so awesome we deci...
Representing stories through documentary film can offer a means to convey multilayered and sensory a...
According to the UNHCR, the number of people displaced due to persecution, conflict, generalised vio...
The lived experiences of young people are becoming increasingly marginalised within the narrowly def...
There is now a well-established tradition of using participatory research methods, of which arts-bas...
Narrating Our World (NOW) was an arts-based project that attempted to understand the educational exp...
In this article, we consider the Australian beach as a material, imaginary and social arena in which...
As Australian institutions shift towards widening participation in higher education, recent research...
In 2012-2015 I worked with first generation child migrants in Australia, the UK and China in a serie...
In 2012-2015 I worked with first generation child migrants in Australia, the UK and China in a serie...
The People They Make Us Welcome, a new policy paper by the Centre for Multicultural Youth explores h...
ABROAD is a short film, which tells a story of an Indonesian student, Priyo (23) who lived in Brisba...
The Social Action by Youth (SAY) project provided participants with an opportunity to explore their ...
The ‘Our True Colours’ (OTC) storytelling project brought together a group of four women from refuge...
Representing stories through documentary film can offer a means to convey multilayered and sensory a...
Abstract Drawing from a programme of applied research engaging with diverse groups of young people i...
Representing stories through documentary film can offer a means to convey multilayered and sensory a...
According to the UNHCR, the number of people displaced due to persecution, conflict, generalised vio...
The lived experiences of young people are becoming increasingly marginalised within the narrowly def...
There is now a well-established tradition of using participatory research methods, of which arts-bas...
Narrating Our World (NOW) was an arts-based project that attempted to understand the educational exp...
In this article, we consider the Australian beach as a material, imaginary and social arena in which...
As Australian institutions shift towards widening participation in higher education, recent research...
In 2012-2015 I worked with first generation child migrants in Australia, the UK and China in a serie...
In 2012-2015 I worked with first generation child migrants in Australia, the UK and China in a serie...
The People They Make Us Welcome, a new policy paper by the Centre for Multicultural Youth explores h...
ABROAD is a short film, which tells a story of an Indonesian student, Priyo (23) who lived in Brisba...
The Social Action by Youth (SAY) project provided participants with an opportunity to explore their ...
The ‘Our True Colours’ (OTC) storytelling project brought together a group of four women from refuge...
Representing stories through documentary film can offer a means to convey multilayered and sensory a...
Abstract Drawing from a programme of applied research engaging with diverse groups of young people i...
Representing stories through documentary film can offer a means to convey multilayered and sensory a...
According to the UNHCR, the number of people displaced due to persecution, conflict, generalised vio...
The lived experiences of young people are becoming increasingly marginalised within the narrowly def...