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"Should we be Royal?" by Warren Kealy-Bateman, Louise Nash et al.


Abstract
Objective: Our college name The Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists (RANZCP) and Crest (Coat of Arms) are echoes of our colonial past, which create a barrier to an inclusive 21st-century Australasian psychiatry. Two hundred and fifty years after European settlement, this article reviews the colonial legacy, the evolution of the college and the process by which the prefix ‘Royal’ came to be attached. This is now an anachronism that symbolically undermines our mission to create a fully inclusive psychiatry for all Australians and New Zealanders, from indigenous people across the spectrum of cultures drawn from recent migrations within our complex multicultural society. Conclusion: As psychiatrists, it is time to modernise and reinvent the college name and Crest. We will be a healthier and more inclusive community of practice without the ‘Royal’ prefix, and with a new symbol for our college that embodies our values and vision. ....

New Zealand , New Zealanders , Zealand College Of Psychiatrists , Royal Australian , New Zealand College , Medical College , Torres Strait Islander , புதியது ஜீலாந்து , ஜீலாந்து கல்லூரி ஆஃப் மனநல மருத்துவர்கள் , அரச ஆஸ்திரேலிய , புதியது ஜீலாந்து கல்லூரி ,

Are we finally seeing action on Aboriginal water justice?


Are we finally seeing action on Aboriginal water justice?
 
There’s a famous image from 1975 of Prime Minister Gough Whitlam pouring red earth into the hands of Gurindji leader, Vincent Lingiari, as a symbolic gesture of returning land back to the Gurindji people. It’s a powerful image and represents an important turning point in Australian land rights policy a point when the federal government finally started to acknowledge that this nation state has been built on stolen land and that it was past time for restitution. But something that really strikes me about this image on a symbolic level, particularly as an academic that has spent their whole career focused on water, is just how dry the earth is. ....

Australian Capital Territory , Gough Whitlam , Cristy Clark , Vincent Lingiari , Erin Odonnell , Jenny Evans Getty , Waters Aboriginal Corporation , Melbourne University , High Court , Woodward Commission , University Of Canberra , Prime Minister Gough Whitlam , Barka Darling , Getty Images , Aboriginal Lands Rights , Northern Territory , Aboriginal Land Rights Act , Commonwealth Native Title Act , Native Title , Native Title Amendment Act , Murray Darling Basin , Traditional Owners , Indigenous Nations , Murray Lower Darling Rivers , Echuca Declaration , Traditional Owner ,

How Aboriginal rock art can live on even when gone


Date Time
How Aboriginal rock art can live on even when gone
This article by Professor Joakim Goldhahn from UWA’s Centre of Rock Art Research and Professor Paul S.C.Taçon from Griffith University, originally appeared in The Conversation on 8 April 2021.
Aboriginal rock art unfolds stories about the present-past and emerging worlds, often described by an outsider as the Dreamtime. Some rock art, it is believed, was put in place by spiritual and mythological beings. Many of these Ancestral Beings travelled vast distances, and their journeys link places, clans and different rock art paintings.
Other images were created to educate children about cultural protocols, or just made to tell an amusing story. The artists who created the works are also important. Some artists were prolific and appreciated. A person who made a hand stencil could often be identified by the hand’s shape. ....

Kakadu National Park , Northern Territory , Joakim Goldhahn , Billy Miargu , Robert Edwards , Daphnie Baljur , Joanne Sullivan , George Chaloupka , Linda Biyalwanga , Griffith University , Centre Of Rock Art Research , Australian Mining Industry Council , Professor Joakim Goldhahn , Rock Art Research , Ancestral Beings , Ancestral Being , Old People , University Of Western Australia , The Rock , Family Members , National Park , காக்கது தேசிய பூங்கா , வடக்கு பிரதேசம் , ராபர்ட் எட்வர்ட்ஸ் , ஜொவந் சல்லிவன் , ஜார்ஜ் சலோப்கா ,

Applications open for 20th Premier's Science Awards


Date Time
Applications open for 20th Premier’s Science Awards
Applications are now open for Western Australia’s 2021 Premier’s Science Awards and the WA Science Hall of Fame
Awards have celebrated local STEM superstars for 20 years
Winners will be announced during National Science Week in August
Western Australian achievements in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) will be in the spotlight at the upcoming 2021 Premier’s Science Awards, with applications now open.
Established in 2002, the awards recognise outstanding achievements in scientific research, study and engagement by Western Australians.
Award categories in 2021 include Scientist of the Year, Woodside Early Career Scientist of the Year, ExxonMobil Student Scientist of the Year, Chevron Science Engagement Initiative of the Year and Shell Aboriginal STEM Student of the Year. ....

Roger Cook , Bryan Lister , Steven Tingay , Mark Mcgowan , Australian Museum , Murdoch University , Edith Cowan University , Chevron Science Engagement Initiative Of The Year , Telethon Kids Institute , University Of Western Australia , Curtin University , Western Australia , Science Awards , National Science Week , Woodside Early Career Scientist , Exxonmobil Student Scientist , Chevron Science Engagement Initiative , Shell Aboriginal , Western Australians , Chief Scientist , Professor Peter Klinken , Professor Steven Tingay , Professor Ryan , Western Australian Museum , Telethon Kids , Premier Mark Mcgowan ,