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Ongoing Conversations about Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Research Agendas and Directions

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 February 2016

Martin Nakata*
Affiliation:
Jumbunna Indigenous House of Learning, University of TechnologySydney, PO Box 123, Broadway, New South Wales, 2007, Australia
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Abstract

As we move forward with the shaping of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander research agendas and directions in Australia we are confronted with many issues basic to the beginning of any discipline: the problem of small numbers; the complexity and enormity of the problems; the diversity in the intellectual field; the limited albeit developing expertise; the limited opportunities for intellectual dialogue; and, of course, the absence of resources to build a professional base. The issue of our relative absence from developing academic knowledge traditions over the last two centuries, and our recent entrée to the higher eduction sector, understandably, compounds our beginning point. This paper was the basis of a keynote address at the third Indigenous Researchers’ Forum in Melbourne in 2001 and, in the main, is part of an ongoing conversation that speaks to the developing issues.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s) 2004

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References

Nakata, M. (2001, 21 February). Cross-cultural consideration [Higher Education Supplement]. The Australian, p. 41.Google Scholar