International audienceThis paper seeks to locate and discuss the production of ethnographic knowledge in the intercultural field of Indigenous Australia. While issues of personhood and relatedness, identity and exchange, have been well documented, they have rarely been considered from an intercultural and relational perspective where individuals (including the researcher) are the outcome rather than the premise of relationships. I describe the site of ethnographic research as a field of relational possibilities and discuss naming practices that occur during fieldwork. I argue, in the light of the relationship developed with an Aboriginal grassroots organisation, that the constitution of the researcher himself and his description of a social...
The following chapter draws on the experience of using qualitative methods (in particular Grounded T...
This paper explores an emerging paradigm for HCI design research based primarily upon engagement, re...
Is there a view that academic anthropology operates or belongs in a ‘sacred’ space that is distingui...
This doctoral project explores the collaborative process and relationships formed between anthropol...
This article is told as a story about how a project, Strong culture, healthier lifestyles, took step...
In this paper, which is a read ‘conversation’, the intention is to take the reader\ud into the life ...
The enthusiasm for research in an Indigenous context has led to the introduction of formal guideline...
Abstract: This article examines anthropological conceptions of culture and difference and assesses t...
This paper discusses the incorporation of Indigenous knowledge within contemporary research practice...
This paper discusses the incorporation of Indigenous knowledge within contemporary research practice...
This paper examines applied anthropology in relation to Native self-determination. Adherence to the ...
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples of Australia are among the most researched in the worl...
Searching to identify positive, constructive ways forward in the face of folkloristics’ colonialist ...
This paper explores different ways of conceptualising Indigenous/non-Indigenous research collaborati...
The relationship between fieldworkers (anthropologists, archaeologists, linguists, historians) and p...
The following chapter draws on the experience of using qualitative methods (in particular Grounded T...
This paper explores an emerging paradigm for HCI design research based primarily upon engagement, re...
Is there a view that academic anthropology operates or belongs in a ‘sacred’ space that is distingui...
This doctoral project explores the collaborative process and relationships formed between anthropol...
This article is told as a story about how a project, Strong culture, healthier lifestyles, took step...
In this paper, which is a read ‘conversation’, the intention is to take the reader\ud into the life ...
The enthusiasm for research in an Indigenous context has led to the introduction of formal guideline...
Abstract: This article examines anthropological conceptions of culture and difference and assesses t...
This paper discusses the incorporation of Indigenous knowledge within contemporary research practice...
This paper discusses the incorporation of Indigenous knowledge within contemporary research practice...
This paper examines applied anthropology in relation to Native self-determination. Adherence to the ...
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples of Australia are among the most researched in the worl...
Searching to identify positive, constructive ways forward in the face of folkloristics’ colonialist ...
This paper explores different ways of conceptualising Indigenous/non-Indigenous research collaborati...
The relationship between fieldworkers (anthropologists, archaeologists, linguists, historians) and p...
The following chapter draws on the experience of using qualitative methods (in particular Grounded T...
This paper explores an emerging paradigm for HCI design research based primarily upon engagement, re...
Is there a view that academic anthropology operates or belongs in a ‘sacred’ space that is distingui...