'Hunting Wave Hill' Research Project Warning: this presentation contains images of deceased people and may be distressing to some viewers 'Hunting Wave Hill' Research Project
Hunting Wave Hill A research project by Charlie Ward Image courtesy of Peter Hudson A research project by Charlie Ward Master of Arts in Creative Writing Faculty of English Flinders University, 2011
'Hunting Wave Hill' Research Project the tracks present past 'Hunting Wave Hill' Research Project
Hunting Wave Hill: Research Project ...lead to Wave Hill Hunting Wave Hill: Research Project
Map courtesy of Colin Salter Topic Summary Map courtesy of Colin Salter
Hunting Wave Hill: Research Project Research Question 1966-1986: what happened? Current implications: personal; professional and policy? Hunting Wave Hill: Research Project
Research Methodology Auto-ethnography Oral History Thanks to the Woditj family of Palumpa 'Hunting Wave Hill' Research Project
'Hunting Wave Hill' Research Project Rationale of Creative Work ... the more I uncovered about the ‘local’, the more I came to see the best way of explaining the ‘national’ was to focus on the ‘local’. (McKenna: 2002) Image Courtesy of National Archives of Australia 'Hunting Wave Hill' Research Project
Rationale: Subjectivity, Race and Ethics Image courtesy of Rob Wesley Smith 'Hunting Wave Hill' Research Project 'Hunting Wave Hill' Research Project
'Hunting Wave Hill' Research Project Rationale: exegesis Ramifications for Indigenous policy formulation and antiracist support 'Hunting Wave Hill' Research Project
'Hunting Wave Hill' Research Project Literature Review and..... Academic works Archival material Private correspondence Oral histories 'Hunting Wave Hill' Research Project
'Hunting Wave Hill' Research Project Thesis Outline Creative Work (60,000 words): Introduction (5,000 words). Part One: 1966-1971. (20, 000 words). Part Two 1972-1975. (20, 000 words): Part Three: 1976-1986. (10, 000 words) Epilogue. (5, 000 words): Elements of the Exegesis (five chapters of 8,000 words) The paradoxical role of government: resistance and dependence … the bureaucratic enablers Indigenous people and their non-Indigenous supporters: the institutionalisation of ‘Wattie Creek’ relationships in the aboriginal service industry. The Wave Hill / Daguragu model: a template for Indigenous affairs? Lessons from Daguragu on ‘Self-determination.’ Men of Roper River: the contribution to Indigenous rights Image courtesy of Lyn Riddett and John Woodward 'Hunting Wave Hill' Research Project
'Hunting Wave Hill' Research Project Research Plan Date Semester Activity Jan-June 2010 Year 1, Sem I Ethics Approval, Annotated Bibliography, Literature Review, Draft of initial chapter of creative work. July-Dec 2010 Year 1, Sem II Apply for scholarship. Create research activity database, Oral History interviewing, archival research. Jan-June 2011 Year 2, Sem I Research Proposal and presentation, Apply for PhD and research funding. Oral History interviews, draft of initial exegetical chapters. July-Dec 2011 Year 2, Sem II Apply for scholarship. Archival research, Oral History Interviews, continued writing Jan-June 2012 Year 3, Sem I Progress draft of thesis, conference presentation. July-Dec 2012 Year 3, Sem II Submit draft of thesis 'Hunting Wave Hill' Research Project
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