Skip to main content

CIPR

  • Home
  • About
    • Annual reports
  • People
    • Executives
    • Academics
    • Professional staff
    • Research officers
    • Visitors
      • Past visitors
    • Current PhD students
    • Graduated PhD students
  • Publications
    • Policy Insights: Special Series
    • Commissioned Reports
    • Working Papers
    • Discussion Papers
    • Topical Issues
    • Research Monographs
    • 2011 Census papers
    • 2016 Census papers
    • People on Country
    • Talk, Text and Technology
    • Culture Crisis
    • The Macquarie Atlas of Indigenous Australia
    • Indigenous Futures
    • Information for authors
  • Events
    • Workshops
    • Event series
  • News
  • Students
    • Study with us
  • Research
    • Key research areas
    • Visiting Indigenous Fellowship
    • Past projects
      • Indigenous Researcher-in-Residence
      • Sustainable Indigenous Entrepreneurs
      • Indigenous Population
        • Publications
        • 2011 Lecture Series
      • New Media
        • Western Desert Special Speech Styles Project
      • People On Country
        • Project overview
          • Advisory committee
          • Funding
          • Research partners
          • Research team
        • Project partners
          • Dhimurru
          • Djelk
          • Garawa
          • Waanyi/Garawa
          • Warddeken
          • Yirralka Rangers
          • Yugul Mangi
        • Research outputs
          • Publications
          • Reports
          • Newsletters
          • Project documents
      • Indigenous Governance
        • Publications
        • Annual reports
        • Reports
        • Case studies
        • Newsletters
        • Occasional papers
        • Miscellaneous documents
      • Education Futures
        • Indigenous Justice Workshop
        • Research outputs
        • Research summaries
  • Contact us

Research Spotlight

  • Zero Carbon Energy
    • Publications and Submissions
  • Market value for Indigenous Knowledge
  • Indigenous public servants
  • Urban Indigenous Research Network
    • About
    • People
    • Events
    • News
    • Project & Networks
      • ANU Women in Indigenous Policy and Law Research Network (WIPLRN)
      • ANU Development and Governance Research Network (DGRNET)
      • Reconfiguring New Public Management
        • People
        • NSW survey
    • Publications
    • Contact

Related Sites

  • ANU College of Arts & Social Sciences
  • Research School of Social Sciences
  • Australian National Internships Program

Administrator

Breadcrumb

HomeUpcoming EventsIndigenous and Other Australians Since 1901
Indigenous and Other Australians since 1901

Detail from Gulach (2006) by Terry Ngamandara Wilson

How are we to understand the current impasse in the relationship between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians. One way to answer this question is to construct an historical narrative. Any such narrative requires the author to make debatable interpretive decisions: when to start the story? What characters are important? Can we understand their motives? What are the phases of the story, the turning-points? How to describe the ‘now’ at which the story terminates. There will always be more than one reasonable way to answer such questions, and in this paper I offer my answers – largely in the form of a summary of my 135 thousand word book ‘Indigenous and other Australians since 1901’ (2017). The paper will be of interest both to those who have read the book (and who may wish to debate its arguments, methods and stories) and those who have not read (and may not ever read) the book. I am keen to dialogue with both categories of reader.

Bio:
Professor Tim Rowse is Emeritus Professor in the Institute for Culture and Society at Western Sydney University. Although much of what he writes can best be described as History, his formal training has been in Government, Sociology and Anthropology. He has taught at Macquarie University, the Australian National University and Harvard University (where he held the Australian Studies chair in 2003-4), and he has held research appointments at the University of Sydney, the University of Melbourne, the University of Queensland and the ANU. Since the early 1980s, his research has focused on the relationships between Indigenous and other Australians, in Central Australia (where he lived from 1989 to 1996) and in the national political sphere. His most recent book, Indigenous and Other Australians since 1901, was published by UNSW Press in 2017.

Media:
https://soundcloud.com/user-763545963/proftimrowse-caepr-seminar-150818-...

 

Date & time

  • Wed 15 Aug 2018, 12:30 pm - 12:30 pm

Location

Room 2145 (Jon Altman Room), 2nd Floor Copland Building, Kingsley Place

Speakers

  • Emeritus Prof. Tim Rowse, Institute for Culture and Society at Western Sydney University

Contact

  •  Gary Marshall
     Send email
     02 6125 0587