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Professor Paul Memmott
Professor

Paul Memmott

Email: 
Phone: 
+61 7 336 53681

Overview

Background

Professor Paul Memmott is an anthropologist and architect and for some decades was the Director of the Aboriginal Environments Research Centre at the University of Queensland (School of Architecture and Institute for Social Science Research). This has now become the Aboriginal Environments Research Collaborative (AERC) within the School of Architecture, Design and Planning. The AERC has provided and continues to provide an applied research focus on a range of topics in relation to Indigenous populations, including institutional architecture, vernacular architecture, housing, crowding, governance, well-being, homelessness, family violence and social planning for communities.

Paul was the first full-time architectural-anthropological consultant in Australia, being principal of a research consultancy practice in Aboriginal projects during 1980 to 2008. His research interests encompass Aboriginal sustainable housing and settlement design, Aboriginal access to institutional architecture, Indigenous constructs of place and cultural heritage, vernacular architecture, social planning in Indigenous communities, cultural change and architectural anthropology.

Paul’s scholarly research output includes over 300 publications (including 11 books and monographs), 215 applied research reports and 40 competitive grants. He has supervised over 50 postgraduate and honours students and has won a number of prestigious teaching awards in Indigenous education (including an Australian Award for University Teaching – AAUT). One of his books, titled 'Gunyah, Goondie + Wurley: Aboriginal Architecture of Australia', received three national book awards in 2008 (Edition 1), including the prestigious Stanner Award from the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies, and then upon the publication of an expanded edition 2 in 2022, another three national book awards.

Paul also has extensive professional anthropological experience in Aboriginal land rights claims, Native Title claims and associated court work since 1980. He has presented evidence and been examined in a variety of Australian courts as an expert witness on a cross-section of Indigenous issues, in addition to the Native Title work.

Awards

  • AIA Neville Quarry Award, 2015
  • Best Exhibit, Australian Architectural Exhibit, Venice Biennale 2018 (Team led by Baracco + Wright Architects, Melbourne)

Memberships

  • Life Member, Academy of Social Sciences (Australia)
  • Life Fellow, Australian Institute of Architects
  • Fellow, Australian Anthropological Society

Availability

Professor Paul Memmott is:
Available for supervision
Media expert

Qualifications

  • Bachelor (Honours), The University of Queensland
  • Doctor of Philosophy, The University of Queensland
  • Australian Anthropological Society, Australian Anthropological Society
  • Royal Australian Institute of Architects, Royal Australian Institute of Architects

Research interests

  • Cross-cultural Study of the Ethno-environmental Relations of Indigenous Peoples

    Five strands of research have emerged from my early career foundations that shape my research interests. (1) Vernacular Architecture and Material Culture: I have studied traditional Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander shelters, houses and settlements for 40 years. (2) Aboriginal housing and institutional architecture: Australian Aboriginal housing and settlement research with over 50 publications in this field. (3) Indigenous homelessness: I have carried out empirical research studies on Indigenous homelessness in Australia, with some 16 publications in this field. (4) Indigenous family violence: In this difficult field I have researched the phenomenon and authored a national overview report for the Australian Government, “Violence in Indigenous Australia” that formulated a national definition of Indigenous family violence and integrated causal explanations. (5) Geography of place and cultural landscapes: I have been engaged in research for Aboriginal land claims and native title claims for over 30 years; as well as carrying out sacred site recording for Cultural Heritage agencies. My knowledge of Aboriginal geography has been applied to urban planning research and I have been involved in land and sea management issues with Aboriginal people both in terms of assisting groups to develop management plans, and to protect cultural heritage sites.

Research impacts

Five fields of applied research impacts in national and international fora:

(1) Vernacular Architecture and Material Culture

(2) Aboriginal Housing and Institutional Architecture

(3) Geography of place and cultural landscapes

(4) Indigenous homelessness and

5) Indigenous family violence.

In varied academic, industry and government sectors he presented applied and policy related research. Since 2008, he was an invited guest speaker at 20 conferences, and another 15 invited keynote addresses influencing government policy change, including Commonwealth ministerial and standing committees and policy forums, professional and industry symposiums, ‘think-tanks’ and ‘lock-ups’, public lectures, gallery openings and book launches.

The inter-disciplinary nature of his work and its indigenous-specific field, he is a specialist referee for national and international journals in architecture, urban policy, anthropology, archaeology, economics, demography, housing and medicine.

In addition to his research publications (including 230 journal papers, 10 books and monographs), I was commissioned to write 215 applied research reports and 36 competitive grants (incl. as Team Leader on two ARC Discovery).

Works

Search Professor Paul Memmott’s works on UQ eSpace

318 works between 1980 and 2024

41 - 60 of 318 works

2018

Journal Article

We're the same as the Inuit!: exploring Australian Aboriginal perceptions of climate change in a multidisciplinary mixed methods study

Nash, Daphne, Memmott, Paul, Reser, Joseph and Suliman, Samid (2018). We're the same as the Inuit!: exploring Australian Aboriginal perceptions of climate change in a multidisciplinary mixed methods study. Energy Research and Social Science, 45, 107-119. doi: 10.1016/j.erss.2018.06.027

We're the same as the Inuit!: exploring Australian Aboriginal perceptions of climate change in a multidisciplinary mixed methods study

2018

Book Chapter

The re-invention of the ‘Behaviour Setting’ in the new indigenous architecture

Memmott, Paul (2018). The re-invention of the ‘Behaviour Setting’ in the new indigenous architecture. The Handbook of Contemporary Indigenous Architecture. (pp. 831-868) edited by Elizabeth Grant, Kelly Greenop, Albert L. Refiti and Daniel J. Glenn. Singapore: Springer. doi: 10.1007/978-981-10-6904-8_31

The re-invention of the ‘Behaviour Setting’ in the new indigenous architecture

2018

Other Outputs

Authority from the Land: negotiating the politics of tradition for service delivery in remote Aboriginal Australia

Memmott, Paul and Nash, Daphne (2018). Authority from the Land: negotiating the politics of tradition for service delivery in remote Aboriginal Australia. Traditional Dwellings and Settlements Working Paper Series. Discussion Paper No 304. International Association for the Study of Traditional Environments.

Authority from the Land: negotiating the politics of tradition for service delivery in remote Aboriginal Australia

2017

Journal Article

Gununa peacemaking: informalism, cultural difference and contemporary Indigenous conflict management

Brigg, Morgan, Memmott, Paul, Venables, Philip and Zonday, Berry (2017). Gununa peacemaking: informalism, cultural difference and contemporary Indigenous conflict management. Social and Legal Studies, 27 (3), 345-366. doi: 10.1177/0964663917719955

Gununa peacemaking: informalism, cultural difference and contemporary Indigenous conflict management

2017

Journal Article

House rules: a study of conditionality and indigenous social housing tenancies in urban, regional and remote Australia

Nash, Daphne, Memmott, Paul and Moran, Mark (2017). House rules: a study of conditionality and indigenous social housing tenancies in urban, regional and remote Australia. Indigenous Law Bulletin, 8 (30), 15-19.

House rules: a study of conditionality and indigenous social housing tenancies in urban, regional and remote Australia

2017

Journal Article

High aspect ratio nanocellulose from an extremophile spinifex grass by controlled acid hydrolysis

Amiralian, Nasim, Annamalai, Pratheep, Garvey, Christopher, Jiang, Edward, Memmott, Paul and Martin, Darren (2017). High aspect ratio nanocellulose from an extremophile spinifex grass by controlled acid hydrolysis. Cellulose, 24 (9), 3753-3766. doi: 10.1007/s10570-017-1379-6

High aspect ratio nanocellulose from an extremophile spinifex grass by controlled acid hydrolysis

2017

Journal Article

The emergence of an architectural anthropology in Aboriginal Australia: the work of the Aboriginal Environments Research Centre

Memmott, Paul and Keys, Cathy (2017). The emergence of an architectural anthropology in Aboriginal Australia: the work of the Aboriginal Environments Research Centre. Architectural Theory Review, 21 (2), 218-236. doi: 10.1080/13264826.2017.1316752

The emergence of an architectural anthropology in Aboriginal Australia: the work of the Aboriginal Environments Research Centre

2017

Other Outputs

Wild Australia: Meston's Wild Australia Show 1892-1893 Exhibition

Memmott, Paul, Aird, Michael and Thomson, Linda (2017). Wild Australia: Meston's Wild Australia Show 1892-1893 Exhibition. University of Queensland, Brisbane: University of Queensland.

Wild Australia: Meston's Wild Australia Show 1892-1893 Exhibition

2017

Book Chapter

Nanotechnology and the Dreamtime knowledge of spinifex grass

Memmott, Paul, Martin, Darren and Amiralian, Nasim (2017). Nanotechnology and the Dreamtime knowledge of spinifex grass. Green composites. (pp. 181-198) edited by Caroline Baillie and Randika Jayasinghe. Duxford, United Kingdom: Woodhead Publishing. doi: 10.1016/B978-0-08-100783-9.00008-3

Nanotechnology and the Dreamtime knowledge of spinifex grass

2017

Book Chapter

Early Aboriginal society

Memmott, Paul C. and Bond, Alexander (2017). Early Aboriginal society. Water futures: an integrated water and flood management plan for enhancing liveability in South East Queensland. (pp. 15-16) edited by James Davidson and Sam Bowstead. South Brisbane, QLD, Australia: James Davidson Architect.

Early Aboriginal society

2017

Book Chapter

Spinifex structures in Central Australia

Memmott, Paul (2017). Spinifex structures in Central Australia. HABITAT: vernacular architecture for a changing planet. (pp. 556-559) edited by Sandra Piesik. London, United Kingdom: Thames and Hudson.

Spinifex structures in Central Australia

2017

Book Chapter

Architectural anthropology: developing a methodological framework for Indigenous wellbeing

Kreutz, Angela and Memmott, Paul (2017). Architectural anthropology: developing a methodological framework for Indigenous wellbeing. Routledge Handbook of Environmental Anthropology. (pp. 90-104) edited by Helen Kopnina and Eleanor Shoreman-Ouimet. Abbingdon, Oxon, United Kingdom: Routledge. doi: 10.4324/9781315768946

Architectural anthropology: developing a methodological framework for Indigenous wellbeing

2016

Journal Article

Remote Indigenous settlements - more than tiny dots on a map

Go-Sam, Carroll and Memmott, Paul (2016). Remote Indigenous settlements - more than tiny dots on a map. Architecture Australia, 105 (5), 53-54.

Remote Indigenous settlements - more than tiny dots on a map

2016

Book Chapter

Reviving culture on Mornington Island (and on losing the Ammaroo truck)

Memmott, Paul (2016). Reviving culture on Mornington Island (and on losing the Ammaroo truck). Serious whitefella stuff: when solutions became the problem in indigenous affairs. (pp. 73-101) edited by Mark Moran. Melbourne, Victoria, Australia: Melbourne University Press.

Reviving culture on Mornington Island (and on losing the Ammaroo truck)

2016

Book Chapter

Indigenous homelessness: Australian context

Memmott, Paul and Nash, Daphne (2016). Indigenous homelessness: Australian context. Indigenous homelessness: perspectives from Canada, Australia and New Zealand. (pp. 213-220) edited by Evelyn J. Peters and Julia Christensen. Winnipeg, Canada: University of Manitoba Press.

Indigenous homelessness: Australian context

2016

Journal Article

Shifting Australian Indigenous Settlements

Memmott, Paul and Go-Sam, Carroll (2016). Shifting Australian Indigenous Settlements. Traditional Dwellings and Settlements Working Paper Series, 278, 1-23.

Shifting Australian Indigenous Settlements

2016

Book Chapter

Looking through the service lens: case studies in Indigenous homelessness in two regional Australian towns

Memmott, Paul, Nash, Daphne, Willetts, Rob and Franks, Patricia (2016). Looking through the service lens: case studies in Indigenous homelessness in two regional Australian towns. Indigenous homelessness: perspectives from Canada, Australia and New Zealand. (pp. 245-269) edited by Evelyn J. Peters and Julia Christensen. Winnipeg, Canada: University of Manitoba Press.

Looking through the service lens: case studies in Indigenous homelessness in two regional Australian towns

2016

Journal Article

Staged savagery: Archibald Meston and his Indigenous exhibits

McKay, Judith and Memmott, Paul (2016). Staged savagery: Archibald Meston and his Indigenous exhibits. Aboriginal History, 40, 181-203.

Staged savagery: Archibald Meston and his Indigenous exhibits

2016

Other Outputs

Housing conditionality, Indigenous lifeworlds and policy outcomes: Mt Isa case study

Memmott, Paul and Nash, Daphne (2016). Housing conditionality, Indigenous lifeworlds and policy outcomes: Mt Isa case study. AHURI Final Report Melbourne, VIC, Australia: AHURI (Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute).

Housing conditionality, Indigenous lifeworlds and policy outcomes: Mt Isa case study

2016

Book Chapter

Fission, fusion and syncretism: linguistic and environmental changes amongst the Tangkic people of the southern Gulf of Carpentaria, Northern Australia

Memmott, Paul, Round, Erich, Rosendahl, Daniel and Ulm, Sean (2016). Fission, fusion and syncretism: linguistic and environmental changes amongst the Tangkic people of the southern Gulf of Carpentaria, Northern Australia. Land and language in Cape York Peninsula and the Gulf Country. (pp. 105-136) edited by Jean-Christophe Verstraete and Hafner, Diane. Philadelphia, United States: John Benjamins Publishing Company. doi: 10.1075/clu.18.06mem

Fission, fusion and syncretism: linguistic and environmental changes amongst the Tangkic people of the southern Gulf of Carpentaria, Northern Australia

Funding

Current funding

  • 2022 - 2026
    STopping Acute Rheumatic Fever Infections to Strengthen Health (STARFISH) - (NHMRC Synergy grant administered by Uni Western Australia)
    University of Western Australia
    Open grant

Past funding

  • 2017
    Financial Wellbeing and Capability Activity Evaluation Framework
    Commonwealth Department of Social Services
    Open grant
  • 2017 - 2022
    From illustration to evidence: the potential of photographs for Indigenous native title claims in Australia
    ARC Discovery Indigenous
    Open grant
  • 2016 - 2017
    The Development of an Australian Homelessness Monitor
    University of New South Wales
    Open grant
  • 2016 - 2022
    How Meston's 'Wild Australia Show' Shaped Australian Aboriginal History
    ARC Linkage Projects
    Open grant
  • 2016 - 2018
    Architecture and the aboriginal housing panel
    UQ Collaboration and Industry Engagement Fund - FirstLink
    Open grant
  • 2016 - 2022
    Architectural design to improve Indigenous health outcomes
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant
  • 2014 - 2015
    Darumbal native title anthropological report
    Queensland South Native Title Services Limited
    Open grant
  • 2014 - 2016
    Defining the Impact of Regionalism on Aboriginal Housing and Settlements
    ARC Discovery Indigenous
    Open grant
  • 2014
    Evaluating nitrated nanofibrillated cellulose (NFC) from native spinifex grass as superior propellant materials.
    UQ Collaboration and Industry Engagement Fund - Seed Research Grant
    Open grant
  • 2014
    Optimised harvesting of spinifex
    UQ Collaboration and Industry Engagement Fund - FirstLink
    Open grant
  • 2014
    The governance of adaptive development practice in complex Indigenous contexts
    UQ Collaboration and Industry Engagement Fund - Seed Research Grant
    Open grant
  • 2013 - 2014
    Understanding the transformative value of Tongan women's Kau Tou Lalanga: Mobile mats, Mobile phones and money transfer agents
    Regents of the University of California
    Open grant
  • 2012 - 2016
    Aboriginal Lifeways Conditionality Housing Outcomes
    Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute Limited
    Open grant
  • 2012 - 2014
    Intercultural architectural and material culture heritage and conservation in Moreton Bay
    UQ FirstLink Scheme
    Open grant
  • 2011 - 2013
    Aboriginal responses to climate change in arid zone Australia - Regional understandings and capacity building for adaptation
    Climate Change Adaptation Research Grants Program
    Open grant
  • 2011 - 2016
    Addressing concentrations of social disadvantage (administered by UNSW)
    University of New South Wales
    Open grant
  • 2011
    Complete laboratory to semi-industry scale high energy milling and dispersion facility.
    UQ Major Equipment and Infrastructure
    Open grant
  • 2011 - 2012
    Enhancing Analytic Social Science withComputing Capacity & an E-Archive for Aboriginal Environments Research
    UQ Major Equipment and Infrastructure
    Open grant
  • 2010 - 2012
    Spinifex as a sustainable bio-resource for the building industry - harvesting feasibility and resin benchmarking
    UQ Collaboration and Industry Engagement Fund
    Open grant
  • 2010 - 2012
    Overcrowding for Indigenous households in non-remote areas
    Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute Limited
    Open grant
  • 2010 - 2013
    Housing - Housing Assistance and Homelessness Prevention
    Commonwealth Department of Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs
    Open grant
  • 2010 - 2011
    The role of 'Assertive Outreach' in addressing primary homelessness
    Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute Limited
    Open grant
  • 2010 - 2011
    Small-scale Arid-zone Sustainable Settlement Project
    UQ FirstLink Scheme
    Open grant
  • 2009 - 2011
    Service Integration and Indigenous Housing (AHURI grant administered by the University of New South Wales)
    University of New South Wales
    Open grant
  • 2009 - 2010
    Remote Indigenous housing procurement and post-occupancy outcomes - a comparative study
    Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute Limited
    Open grant
  • 2008 - 2009
    Indigenous Homeownership on Communal Title Lands
    Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute Limited
    Open grant
  • 2008 - 2012
    Towards Novel Biomimetic Building Materials: Evaluating Aboriginal and Western Scientific Knowledge of Spinifex Grasses
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant
  • 2007 - 2008
    Sustaining high risk indigenous tenancies
    AHURI WA Research Centre
    Open grant
  • 2006 - 2007
    Scoping the capacity of indigenous community housing organisations - Victoria extension (Project 316)
    Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute Limited
    Open grant
  • 2006 - 2009
    CP5 Demand Responsive Services to Desert Settlements (Desert Services That Work): First Year Implementation
    Desert Knowledge CRC
    Open grant
  • 2006
    Demand responsive services to desert settlements
    Centre for Appropriate Technology
    Open grant
  • 2006 - 2010
    Isolation, Insularity and Change in Island Populations - an Interdisciplinary Study of Aboriginal Cultural Patterns in the Gulf of Carpentaria
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant
  • 2006 - 2007
    Scoping the Capacity of Indigenous Community Housing Organisations (AHURI project administered by Murdoch University)
    Murdoch University
    Open grant
  • 2005 - 2006
    An audit and review of local and international Indigenous Housing research
    Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute Limited
    Open grant
  • 2005
    Architectural Design Criteria For Aboriginal Court Settings
    UQ FirstLink Scheme
    Open grant
  • 2004 - 2005
    Indigenous mobility in discrete and rural settlements
    Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute Limited
    Open grant
  • 2004 - 2005
    Understanding Isolation and Change in Island Human Populations through a study of Indigenous Cultural Patterns in the Gulf of Carpentaria
    UQ External Support Enabling Grant
    Open grant
  • 2002 - 2003
    Categories of indigenous Homeless people and good practice responses to their needs
    Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute Limited
    Open grant
  • 2002 - 2003
    2002 RAIA Sisalation Prize - Housing Design in Indigenous Australia
    Royal Australian Institute of Architects
    Open grant
  • 2002 - 2003
    National Homelessness Strategy
    Department of Family and Community Services
    Open grant
  • 2001 - 2002
    Community Strength Indicators and Measures Project - Phase 2
    Department of Family and Community Services
    Open grant

Supervision

Availability

Professor Paul Memmott is:
Available for supervision

Before you email them, read our advice on how to contact a supervisor.

Available projects

  • Indigenous Cultural Landscape Research

    Postgraduate proposals that examine the ways in which Indigenous people relate to and value significant places and cultural landscapes can be supervised. Such topics might extend into human geography, urban design, urban history, landscape architecture, town planning or cultural heritage. Topics may also relate to how buildings are but positioned into and expressed in this cultural landscape.

  • Indigenous spatial behaviours

    Research topics can be supervised in relation to forms of spatial behaviours of Indigenous groups including in relation to customary land tenure, territoriality, setting theory, crowding and privacy cognitive space and people-environment transactional theory.

  • Indigenous Architecture Research

    Postgraduate proposals that address Indigenous architectural problems can be supervised. Such proposals might apply to Indigenous housing design, procurement, policy or management. Proposals might also include post-occupancy evaluation. Non-housing topics might embrace the architectural needs of Indigenous people in correctional centres, courts, hospitals, schools or clinics. Another research area embraces Indigenous cultural centres and museums.

    Other research topics on Indigenous architectural issues may relate to theories on customary behaviours, cultural change, cultural identity, material culture, architectural meaning and the role of tradition. Topics may pertain to either architect-designed buildings or vernacular buildings.

  • Spinifex Research

    I was the Team Leader for a research project on Spinifex which was titled, ‘Towards Novel Biomimetic Building Materials: Evaluating Aboriginal and Western Scientific Knowledge of Spinifex Grasses’, 2008-2013, which was the first multi-disciplinary study of spinifex in Australia with three key original contributions. PhD scholars are welcomed who can extend this research into bio-architectural and bio-material applications.

    1. New Applications of Aboriginal knowledge: Our partnership is with the Myuma Group who are the Aboriginal Traditional Owners of the Camooweal/Upper Georgina River basin, and who contributed their environmental steward-ship and ethics, their regional Aboriginal geographic knowledge, and human and infrastructure resources. Our project, through a series of published papers and culminating in a museum exhibition, drew together all of the Aboriginal knowledge on spinifex and its uses from the diverse ethnographic sources. We then applied this ethnographic knowledge to broader exploratory investigation of spinifex properties.

    2. New plant knowledge: Using electron-microscopy we prepared cross-sections of grass leaves from all 69 species in the Triodia genus. Pronounced differences in leaf anatomy generated a division into 42 ‘hard’ species with stronger fibres, and 27 ‘soft’ species with weaker fibres but having a resin yielding capacity. Hard spinifex species appear to have double the photosynthetic capacity of soft species with stomata located on both the outer and inner surfaces of the folded leaves, as well as larger bundles of fibres for extra rigidity. Soft species have photosynthetic features restricted to inside of leaf only, but have resin secreting cells. Evolutionary modeling of species diversification during the Miocene and Pliocene climate changes has been developed using DNA analysis. We also addressed the different modes of spinifex reproduction and propagation (seeds, runners, re-sprouts), including the ecological relevance of wildfires. We operated on the premise that spinifex materials would have a unique morphology owing to the fact that Triodia is a xerophyte (arid-area plant requiring little water) which could be expected to display different properties to mesic plant species (moderate water content) from which most biomaterials are derived.

    3. New material inventions: Our bio-engineering team (material engineers, chemists, botanists, architects, Aboriginal consultants) developed techniques for separating plant fibres and resin, and profiled spinifex resin chemistry (a mixture of volatile and nonvolatile terpenoid and secondary compounds: belonging to the thermoplastic class of bio-polymers). Within a low-tech to high-tech spectrum of possible applications, a variety of products were researched ranging from shade roofs, evaporative cooling walls, spinifex reinforced-earth walls and slabs, spinifex insulation batts (all at the low-tech end), to nanowhisker paper, resin to replace urea formaldehyde, coatings that may have anti-termite and ultra-violet screening capacities, bio-composite materials of fibre and resin, polymer derivatives and nano-fibrillated spinifex cellulose (patented) (at the high-tech end). Although few, if any plant resins have been used to generate commercial polymers, our research indicates potential for both Triodia resin and fibres as potential building blocks for renewable polymers and/or composite materials. One particular interest is the exudation cycle of the resin on the surface of the soft spinifex species and whether it functions to protect against excessive moisture loss from its spongy storage mass, whilst simultaneously allowing an osmotic process of gas exchange for photosynthesis; an ongoing subject of one of our PhD students.

Supervision history

Current supervision

  • Master Philosophy

    Aboriginal Dwellings of Southeast Queensland and Northern New South Wales During the 19th Century

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Dr Timothy O'Rourke

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Household-Based Environmental Health Interventions to Improve Community and Householder Health Outcomes in Aboriginal Social Housing in Remote Australia

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Associate Professor Nina Lansbury

Completed supervision

Media

Enquiries

Contact Professor Paul Memmott directly for media enquiries about:

  • Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander studies
  • Aboriginal Australia
  • Indigenous homelessness - Australia
  • Indigenous housing
  • Indigenous violence - Australia
  • Native title
  • Poverty - Indigenous Australia

Need help?

For help with finding experts, story ideas and media enquiries, contact our Media team:

communications@uq.edu.au