
Overview
Background
Lorelle Holland is a proud Mandandanji woman, who grew up on Turrbal Country with her four sisters and parents. Lorelle is a dedicated and passionate Registered Nurse who has worked for over three decades in the health care industry in varied clinical, management, education, and research roles. Lorelle's clinical nursing career highlight was working as a Remote Area Nurse in the Northern Territory with Aboriginal peoples. In Lorelle's appointment as Associate Lecturer in Nursing and Affiliate Associate Lecturer in the Poche Centre for Indigenous Health she hopes to inspire the next generation of nurse clinicians and researchers to ensure the delivery of competent, compassionate, and culturally respectful nursing practice.
Lorelle is a recent alumnus of UQ, graduating from a Master Degree in Public Health in the field of Indigenous Health in July 2020. Lorelle's proudest academic career highlight thus far was receiving the 'Postgraduate Coursework Academic Excellence Award' from Professor Bronwyn Fredericks (Pro-Vice-Chancellor, Indigenous Engagement) and Professor Tracey Bunda (Academic Director, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies Unit) UQ.
Lorelle's personal standpoint as an Aboriginal woman, extensive nursing experience and public health studies allows a broad perspective of the interacting complexities of our environment, health systems, benefits of cohesive interdisciplinary contributions, social determinants of health and the need to decolonise interventions. The rightful platform of decolonising interventions is embedded and validated within the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP). The UNDRIP empowers Indigenous peoples to socially transform their own lives within their own knowledges, strengths, and sovereignty that upholds community led and self-determining strategies to enact required national and global changes to ensure equal education, health, economic, and political outcomes for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.
Lorelle is enrolled in PhD studies in the School of Public Health in the Medicine Faculty and hopes to explore critical race theory and complex health needs concerning the disproportionate rates of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander youth in detention who are removed from their families during critical periods of child development. Additionally, Lorelle's research will utilise a transformative epistemology and decolonising methodologies that centres youth and their communities to reflexively co-design culturally appropriate holistic assessment and diversionary pathways to counter youth detention practices.
Availability
- Ms Lorelle Holland is:
- Available for supervision
- Media expert
Fields of research
Qualifications
- Bachelor, University of Southern Queensland
- Masters (Coursework) of Public Health, The University of Queensland
- The Poche Centre for Indigenous health, The Poche Centre for Indigenous health
Research interests
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Decolonising Approaches for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Children with Complex Health Needs Exposed to the Youth Justice System in Australia: Reducing Incarceration and Recidivism Rates
Rationale and Impact of Research: It is a significant public health and socio-political issue that existing judicial processes fail to recognise complex health needs of alleged young offenders. Research is urgently needed to address complex needs, racialised incarceration practices, punitive punishment,and social control over the lives of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children. The negative impact of incarcerating a child from the age of ten may result in lifetime harm, missed opportunity, and a possible future trajectory of adult imprisonment
Research impacts
It is a significant public health and socio-political issue that existing judicial processes fail to recognise complex health needs of alleged young offenders. Research is urgently needed to address complex needs, racialised incarceration practices, punitive punishment, and social control over the lives of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children. Emerging research points to the disproportionate representation and criminalisation of children with complex needs including neurodevelopmental and mental disorders, alcohol and substance misuse, trauma, homelessness, and social disadvantage. These factors with persistent structural racism increase the risk of criminality and subsequent incarceration of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children The negative impact of incarcerating a child from the age of ten may result in lifetime harm, missed opportunity, and a possible future trajectory of adult imprisonment.
Works
Search Professor Lorelle Holland’s works on UQ eSpace
2022
Other Outputs
Promoting planetary health in remote Queensland: innovative solutions for agricultural plant production
Fathi, Leila, Holland, Lorelle, Otwani, Daniel and Ye, Yunan (2022). Promoting planetary health in remote Queensland: innovative solutions for agricultural plant production. Global Change Scholars Program Brisbane, QLD Australia; Longreach, QLD, Australia: The University of Queensland; Remote Area Planning and Development Board (RAPAD). doi: 10.14264/aa699a3
2022
Other Outputs
Raising the age of criminal responsibility is only a first step. First Nations kids need cultural solutions
Holland, Lorelle and Toombs, Maree (2022, 07 08). Raising the age of criminal responsibility is only a first step. First Nations kids need cultural solutions The Conversation
2022
Journal Article
Examining incarceration rates of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children
Holland, Lorelle, Smirnov, Andrew, Hickman, Amy, Toombs, Maree and Reid, Natasha (2022). Examining incarceration rates of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children. The Lancet Child and Adolescent Health, 6 (9), 599-600. doi: 10.1016/s2352-4642(22)00160-2
2021
Conference Publication
Decolonising approaches for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children with complex needs
Holland, Lorelle (2021). Decolonising approaches for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children with complex needs. Virtual Justice Health Conference 2021, Online, 3 - 4 November. Public Health Association of Australia.
2021
Journal Article
Neurodevelopmental disorders in youth justice: a systematic review of screening, assessment and interventions
Holland, Lorelle, Reid, Natasha and Smirnov, Andrew (2021). Neurodevelopmental disorders in youth justice: a systematic review of screening, assessment and interventions. Journal of Experimental Criminology, 19 (1), 1-40. doi: 10.1007/s11292-021-09475-w
Supervision
Availability
- Ms Lorelle Holland is:
- Available for supervision
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Media
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