Emma Kowal Book Launch – 23rd April

Thursday 23rd April – Book Launch – Emma Kowal – ‘Trapped in the Gap: Doing Good in Indigenous Australia’ (Berghahn, 2015), plus, Academy of Social Sciences of Australia Paul Bourke lecture. 4-7pm, Deakin Melbourne City Centre, Level 3, 550 Bourke Street, Melbourne.

In Australia, a ‘tribe’ of white, middle-class, progressive professionals is actively working to improve the lives of Indigenous people. This book explores what Trapped in the Gaphappens when well-meaning people, supported by the state, attempt to help without harming. ‘White anti-racists’ find themselves trapped by endless ambiguities, contradictions, and double binds — a microcosm of the broader dilemmas of postcolonial societies. These dilemmas are fuelled by tension between the twin desires of equality and difference: to make Indigenous people statistically the same as non-Indigenous people (to ‘close the gap’) while simultaneously maintaining their ‘cultural’ distinctiveness. This tension lies at the heart of failed development efforts in Indigenous communities, ethnic minority populations and the global South. This book explains why doing good is so hard, and how it could be done differently.

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Emma Kowal (with Paradies and Fforde) seeking PhD scholar

Deakin University is seeking an outstanding scholar for a full-time PhD project and scholarship associated with the ARC Discovery Project ‘Reconciling Biological and Social Indigeneity in the Genomic Era’, led by A/Prof Emma Kowal with Professor Yin Paradies and A/Prof Cressida Fforde. The successful candidate will receive a stipend of $25,849 per annum, tax exempt for 3 years and commence by April 2015. Continue reading

Emma Kowal contributes to the ‘Multispecies Salon’

The Multispecies SalonTogether with colleague Joanna Radin, Emma Kowal has contributed an entry on ‘cryopolitics’ to the ‘Multispecies Salon’ website create by anthropologist Eben Kirksey.

The website complements his new edited collection and presents the latest work in ‘multispecies ethnography’, when he calls ’a novel approach to writing culture’ at the boundary of human and non-human worlds. Cryopolitics is featured as a novel concept to explore what happens when biological materials are preserved through time in the freezer.

Emma Kowal ARC success – Reconciling Biological and Social Indigeneity in the Genomic Era

Emma Kowal will soon start work on a new project funded by the Australian Research Council in 2015.

Reconciling Biological and Social Indigeneity in the Genomic Era.

Led by Associate Professor Emma Kowal with Professor Yin Paradies and ANU’s Associate Professor Cressida Fforde, this team will develop and test a biosocial model of Indigeneity that will enhance existing knowledge of Indigenous identification as a critical factor in monitoring and improving the health and wellbeing of Indigenous people.  Continue reading