Griffith connects Indigenous culture with science
Up to 100Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students will be able to immerse themselves in science when Griffith University hosts...
Up to 100Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students will be able to immerse themselves in science when Griffith University hosts...
Prominent Aboriginal Australian lawyer and academic Noel Pearson presented the 2011 Griffith Lecture at the Queensland Conservatorium on October 25....
My new book, Indigenous Courts, Culture and Partner Violence, published by Palgrave Macmillan in May 2019, considers what aspects of...
One year post-referendum, non-Indigenous educators must actively advocate for Indigenous education rights, fostering inclusive practices, amplifying Indigenous voices, and driving systemic change to uphold fundamental human rights and cultural respect.
Budding Indigenous artists are learning to more authentically connect to their cultural identity through art thanks to the Contemporary Australian Indigenous Art unit (CAIA) and an Arts Queensland First Nations Commissioning Fund grant.
Alicia Smyth is the first recipient of a new scholarship that will provide opportunities for female Indigenous law students.
Dr Carol McGregor, who leads Griffith University's unique contemporary Indigenous art program, has received the Australian Academy of the Humanities’ 2020 John Mulvaney Fellowship.
Three artists from Griffith have made the finals of the Telstra National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Awards (NATSIAA).
Griffith law student, Victoria Blundell, has received a $30,000 QIC Indigenous Tertiary Scholarship in her first year at university.
QCA alumnus Carol McGregor has come full circle to lead Griffith's unique Contemporary Australian Indigenous Art program.