Welcome to our fortnightly newsletter. If you have things you’d like to share with the CCH community, please email Anna before the next fortnightly newsletter. We will also share news and updates on LinkedIn. Please do tag us in the news that you are posting on Linkedin so we can share it!
News from Members and Associates
Deborah Lee-Talbot and Lorinda Cramer produced a series of articles for APH last week marking Environment Day. The articles all discussed issues related to the circular economy.
Kristin Demetrious and David Lowe have a new article “What Australia Thinks”: Richard Casey, Earl Newsom and Australia’s Early Embrace of US Public Relations in the Journal of Australian Studies.
Philipp Strobl has a new book – A History of Displaced Knowledge Austrian Refugees from National Socialism in Australia. The book examines the migration of ideas and knowledge carried in the cultural baggage of Austrian refugees who fled to Australia in 1938 and 1939 to escape National Socialism. The book is available open access here.
Seminar Series
Our Trimester 2 Seminar Series kicks off on the 9th July with Geoff Robinson –Liberal politics and liberal history: David Kemp’s histories of Australian liberalism. David Lowe will be the following week (16th July) with a seminar about his new book.
Events
Walk for Truth from Portland to Parliament
25 May – 18 June
Yoorrook Justice Commission invites you to be part of the Walk for Truth from Portland to Parliament. Everyone is invited to join when Yoorrook Deputy Chair Commissioner Travis Lovett, Kerrupmara Gunditjmara, walks from Portland, where colonisation began, to Parliament, where we can transform the future. Starting on Sunday 25 May on Gunditjmara Country at Portland, the Walk will finish at Parliament House on Wednesday 18 June. There is a Geelong Community Event on Wednesday 11 June at 6pm, at the National Indigenous Knowledges Education Research Innovation Institute (NIKERII). This event will include an important discussion with Commissioner Travis Lovett, Peter Sharp – a great grandson of former Prime Minister Alfred Deakin, and others. You can find out more about the walk and other events on the route here.
Q-Lit Festival
24 June, 6:30pm – 8:30pm
Library at the Dock
Unpacking queer culture through the lens of academics. Bringing together leading researchers exploring queer culture, history, and literature. Relax into the evening as academics share insights into LGBTQIA+ storytelling, activism, and identity. Whether you’re a scholar or a curious mind, this night offers a thought-provoking deep dive into the research shaping our understanding of queer experiences. Hosted by Paul Venzo, and featuring Carolyn D’Cruz, Tom Sandercock, Bron Bateman, Clare O’Hanlon, and Hans Kek. More information and tickets can be found here.
HCV Book+Author Event – Dhoombak Goobgoowana
26 June, 6pm
Bard’s Apothecary
Ross Jones will be in conversation with Yves Rees to discuss his new book (co-authored with James Waghorne and Marcia Langton) Dhoombak Goobgoowana: A History of Indigenous Australia and the University of Melbourne Volume 1: Truth. The book acknowledges and publicly addresses the long, complex and troubled relationship between the Indigenous people of Australia and the University of Melbourne. It is a book about race and how it has been constructed by academics in the University. It is also about power and how academics have wielded it and justified its use against Indigenous populations, and about knowledge, especially the Indigenous knowledge that silently contributed to many early research projects and collection endeavours. Booking details are here.
CCH/APH Policy Brief Workshop for PhD/ECRs
13 August 2025
Deakin Downtown
Are you a PhD candidate or ECR interested in learning how to write a policy brief? Join us at Deakin Downtown for a whole-day workshop to learn the ropes of policy writing and translate your expert knowledge into advice for policymakers.
The workshop will include an overview and examples of what a policy brief should entail, scenarios based on your area of research, free-writing a plan/draft a policy brief, feedback from peers and CCH mentors, and a reflective session for questions and concerns. Dr Sarah Pinto and A/Prof Carolyn Holbrook will offer advice from their experience teaching and writing policy briefs, and participants will be invited to submit their policy briefs for publication in Australian Policy and History.
If you are interested in joining the workshop, please RSVP to mia.martinhobbs@deakin.edu.au by 15 July with the following information:
- Main research project
- Suggestions of potential policy issues related to your research
- Any dietary requirements
CCH Research Grants and other opportunities
If you have plans for research in 2025, apply for a research grant now!
It is important that you read the guidelines before you apply for a grant. Check out the guidelines and the application forms in our hub site.
Keep an eye out for Researcher Development Academy workshops available over coming months. For full details of workshops ranging from recruiting graduate researchers to impact to grant writing support and running mostly just 1-2 hours in length, see this RDA page.
There are also research training opportunities available through Deakin eResearch for high-performance computing, MS Excel, programming, data management, cleaning, visualisation, exploration and more. More details are here.
CCH Shut Up and Write
every Monday, 9am-1.30pm, via Zoom.
Start the week strong with a Shut Up and Write! We will run 4 x 50 minute blocks of writing/focus, with breaks in between to chat, grab coffees, etc. All CCH colleagues welcome, especially ECRs, HDRs, and those who work remotely. Feel free to join at any time – it doesn’t matter if you can’t make it to every session, or every block in a session, just come when you can.
The zoom link is here. (Meeting ID: 822 0730 8335, Password: 65182364)
If you would like a recurring invite in your calendar, or you have any trouble joining, email Mia at mia.martinhobbs@deakin.edu.au
Opportunities
Postdoctoral Research Associate in Pacific History
The School of Humanities at the University of Sydney is inviting applications for the G.C. Henderson Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Pacific History to undertake research in Pacific History. As a Postdoctoral Research Fellow Pacific History, you will conduct community-led and/or community-engaged research in Indigenous and Pacific History in the Discipline of History, aligning with our research strategy in several key areas, including imperial and colonial studies, Indigenous studies, de-colonial studies, and Asia-Pacific Studies. This role will also align with the research strategy of the Vere Gordon Childe Centre for the Study of Humanity through Time. More details here, applications are due 15 June 2025.
2026 National Library Scholarship
PhD candidates are encouraged to apply for 8 philanthropically funded scholarships offered by the National Library in 2026 to further their postgraduate research. The amount of financial assistance has increased this year, with successful applicants each receiving $10,000. Applications close on 30 June 2025. You can find out more here.
Journal of Pacific History Publication Incentive Grant
The Journal of Pacific History Inc. invites qualified persons to apply for a Publication Incentive grant. These competitive grants are offered to help support early career Pacific historians to prepare manuscripts for submission to the Journal of Pacific History for peer review. Anyone who has completed a PhD or MA since 2019 in a field relevant to Pacific history, or who is currently enrolled for a doctorate in such a field, can apply for a grant of $3,000 to prepare a manuscript for submission to peer review. Applications are due by the 30 September 2025, and more details and instructions are available in this link.
The Pacific History Association Teresia Teaiwa Prize 2025
The Pacific History Association (PHA) established the Teresia Teaiwa Prize in 2018 to honour the profound legacy of Teresia Teaiwa, former President and Secretary of PHA. The inaugural prize was awarded at the PHA’s 2021 conference. The 2025 winner will be decided and announced at the PHA’s biennial conference to be held on 2-5 December 2025 at the National University of Samoa. The prize is for a conference presentation. Finalists will be shortlisted on the basis of an essay submitted prior to the conference. The 2025 winner will receive a prize of $1000. You can find further information and eligibility requirements here.
Gunson Essay Prize
A prize of AUD $1,000 will be awarded at the 2025 Pacific History Association Conference, for the winner of the Gunson Essay Prize Competition. Postgraduate or senior students from any country are invited to submit an essay in English between 5,000 and 8,000 words on any topic relating to the pasts of the Island Pacific and its peoples by 1 November 2025. For further details and eligibility requirements see this link.
Member of Finance Subcommittee (Voluntary), Australian Queer Archives
The Australian Queer Archives (AQuA) has a vacancy on our finance subcommittee due to the retirement of one member. AQuA collects, preserves and celebrates material from the lives and experiences of lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans and gender diverse, intersex, queer, Brotherboy and Sistergirl (LGBTIQA+) Australians. More details here.
CCH Hub Site
We now have a Sharepoint site (for Deakin staff and students only). This is where you can find CCH templates and logos, and importantly – new grant application forms. CCH members should have access, but you will need to use your Deakin login.
Cover Photo
Old Veterans at Albert Park, Auckland, Kings Birthday 1911 (Source: Auckland Museum)