Loading…
Ensure that your profile is set to public (not private). If your profile is private you will be unable to fully participate and will miss important conference announcements.
The online program is currently invite only. Over the coming weeks we will grant access to presenters and delegates so they can create a profile in the online app and choose sessions they’d like to attend. Please be patient, if you are a registered delegate or presenter we will send instructions when we are ready to invite you.
Register at: https://conference2024.aes.asn.au
Wednesday September 18, 2024 1:30pm - 2:30pm AEST
105
Authors: Alli Burness (Tetra Tech), Seema Naidu (Tetra Tech, FJ), Nathan Sentance (Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences, AU), David Lakisa (Talanoa Consultancy, AU)

In the inaugural ANU Coral Bell Lecture on Indigenous Diplomacy, Dr Mary Graham outlined a powerful legacy of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander relational methods that have operated across a spectacular time scale. She envisioned a compelling future for its renewed application and spoke of these practices as a type of "thinking in formation, a type of slow, collective, and emergent process".

Inspired by Dr Graham's vision, this panel explores synergies, distinctions, and complementarities in local and Indigenous knowledge research methods across Australia and the Pacific. The panel features Wiradjuri, Samoan (Polynesian), Fijian (Melanesian) research specialists from a range of fields who explore and engage with showcase locally specific methodologies that connect across Australia and the Pacific continents, as ways of knowing, doing, and relating with the land, the moana (ocean) and air.

This session frames evaluation and research approaches as reflecting their contextual political order. While the panel will critique the legacies of individualist and survivalist research methods, it will focus on exploring the futures that relational research methods could realize. How do we evolve current institutional approaches to become more commensurate with Indigenous methods? Would institutionalizing these methods resolve the legacy, structure, and form of colonialist political approaches? Panelists will speak to their experience in working to evolve institutions in this way and the research and evaluation methodologies used within them.

The session also situates evaluation within a cannon of contextualizing evidence-based practices (such as political economy analysis, GEDSI analysis or feasibility studies). How might we recast current evaluation and contextualizing or evidence-based approaches to become commensurate with Indigenous, intersectional feminist and local research methods?
Speakers
avatar for Lisa Faerua

Lisa Faerua

Lisa Faerua is a Pacific Freelance Consultant. She brings 17 years of experience in international and community development in the areas of leadership, design, monitoring and evaluation. Lisa has provided technical support to DFAT, MFAT, and Non-Government Organisations such Oxfam... Read More →
Wednesday September 18, 2024 1:30pm - 2:30pm AEST
105 109 Convention Centre Pl, South Wharf VIC 3006, Australia

Log in to save this to your schedule, view media, leave feedback and see who's attending!

Share Modal

Share this link via

Or copy link