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Sunday, June 22, 2025 at 10:43am.
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ThursdaySep 18 2025[Flinders Special Event] Uncle Lewis Yarlupurka O'Brien Oration (for knowledge justice seekers)Website
Oration Abstract
In the Uncle Lewis O’Brien Oration Professor Bunda discusses Indigenising Curriculum at the University of Queensland as a key deliverable of the University’s Reconciliation Action Plan. She details the philosophical framing of Indigenising Curriculum; structural governance required to support the initiative and the resource and professional development needed to sustain the initiative. In addition, Tracey makes known what work remains to strengthen IC as a normalized curriculum inclusion and highlights strengths of the approaches undertaken.
The Oration will be of interest to those curriculum practitioners and knowledge justice seekers.
Biography
Tracey Bunda is a Ngugi Wakka Woman and the Professor- Indigenous Education at the University of Qld. Tracey has had a 4 decade career in higher education, working at various universities holding senior leadership roles. Tracey is a Chief Investigator for the following research projects- ARC Discovery – The Climate Child led by University of Southern Cross; ARC Centre of Excellence – Indigenous Futures led by the University of Qld; ARC Linkage Grant – Peer Parent and Family Advocacy in Australia led by UQ; MRFF – Suicide Prevention in Aboriginal Communities of Central Australia led by the Batchelor Institute. She is the recipient of the 2024 AAUT Career Achievement Award for contributions to student learning, high quality teaching, innovative research and educational leadership. Tracey was also made a Fellow of STARS (Students Transitions Achievement Retention Success) in 2025. Her latest coedited publication with Katelyn Barney, Levon Blue and Laura Deane is Indigensing Curriculum at the University of Qld: A Handbook
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FridayJun 27 2025National Rental Summit: The Missing MiddleWebsite
The Don Dunstan Foundation’s 2025 housing symposium will focus on an area of growing policy concern – renting. This year’s theme - The Missing Middle - recognises the growing role of renting in Australia’s housing mix and will address all aspects of renting – from the public and community housing sector, to the private rental market, to innovations in renting such as build-to-rent projects.
As the title suggests, we’ll be examining the “missing middle” in rentals – people who don’t qualify for public housing, but who are struggling to afford good housing in the private rental market.
The CEO of Housing Australia, Scott Langford, will present the keynote address, providing a national perspective and we’re assembling panels of experts from the housing sector (private and public), researchers and industry experts, people with lived experience, and government decision-makers. The panels at the one-day event will address, among other topics:
· The scope of housing need: the problem, gaps, and the lived experience.
· How are we going to build the houses?
· What will these communities look like?
The event will include a working lunch and networking drinks at the end of the day.