Deakin Anthro Seminar Series, June 4, 2015 – Tess Lea

 

A/Prof. Tess Lea, Department of Gender and Cultural Studies, University of Sydney

Can there be good policy in regional and remote Australia? Wait, is that even a question?

75580 Teresa Lea WS1_2014-11-20Abstract

This talk pulls together the threads of my ethnographic project ‘Can there be good policy? Tracing the paths between policy intent, evidence and practical benefit in regional and remote Australia’ which I have been pursuing in various ways for quite some years. The ethnography draws on case examples from infrastructure projects on Groote Eylandt, schooling efforts in the Victoria River Downs, a film collaboration with the Karrabing Indigenous Corporation from the Anson Bay region in the Top End, and the leadership dilemmas embedded within a community controlled health centre in the Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara Lands of northern South Australia. The research had two elements—pursuit of that policy question, and pursuit of communication modalities for sharing any findings. This talk pushes into these research aims to explore the confusions that its experiments with modes of fieldwork and of communication inevitably generated. Matching my sense of policy’s inherent fragmentation with disjointed study sites, and the desire to suture the answers into a redemptive project either of critique or resolution, are some of the confounders to be discussed.

 

Bio

Tess Lea is Associate Professor in the Department of Gender and Cultural Studies at the University of Sydney. As an ARC Queen Elizabeth II Fellow, she is currently pursuing ethnographic research across housing, infrastructure, community development and education domains to explore the question “can there be good social policy in regional and remote Australia?” She has previously worked as a senior bureaucrat in the Northern Territory Departments of Health and Education, and operated as a ministerial advisor. Her work focuses on conditions of enduring racial inequality in Australia and the material and affective dimensions of how these conditions are reproduced and inhabited.

 

Where: Deakin University, Geelong Waterfront Campus, John Hay Building, Video Conference Room D3.321 (please note the non-standard room). A map of the campus can be found here: http://www.deakin.edu.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0019/330364/waterfront.pdf. The session will also be video-linked to the Burwood Campus, room C7.06, via Virtual Meeting Point (VMP) 5223 9354.

 

When: Thursday, June 4, 5.00-6.50pm

 

All welcome. After the seminar, please join us for drinks/dinner at the Max Hotel, Gheringhap Street.

Leave a Reply