Do you want to be sent the Table of Contents of specific
journals when they come in? Email us on
aboriginal.education.library@education.tas.gov.au
and tell us your name, email address and the name of journal(s)
you are interested in.
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The Aboriginal & Islander Health Worker Journal is distributed nationally and
internationally and has been in circulation since
1977. Each issue covers a range of topics including
primary health care, community profiles, health
promotion, best practice models and workforce
issues.
More information is available at:
http://www.aihwj.com.au/
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Aboriginal History is an annual refereed publication.
It includes articles and information in the field of
Australian ethnohistory, particulary in the post-contact
history of Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders.
The contents for all volumes are available at:
http://www.aboriginalhistory.org/Journals.html |
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Australian Aboriginal Studies (AAS) is
an inter-disciplinary journal promoting high-quality
research in Australian Indigenous studies with a
focus on the humanities and social sciences. It is
published for a wide audience and visual content is
encouraged. Each issue contains several scholarly
articles, accompanied by research reports, book
reviews and news and information.
View the contents list for issues from 1983 to
the present at:
http://www.aiatsis.gov.au/research_program/publications/australian_aboriginal_studies.
Abstracts of articles are included
from 2000 onwards.
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Published by the Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander Studies Unit at the University of Queensland
The Australian Journal of Indigenous
Education is a peer reviewed research journal publishing
articles in the field of Indigenous education.
It is the only journal for educators devoted specifically to
issues of practice, pedagogy and policy in Indigenous education
in Australia.
The Table of Contents and abstracts of all volumes
are accessible online at:
http://www.atsis.uq.edu.au/ajie/index.html?page=33821
Continues: The
Aboriginal child at school. We hold from
v4-23;1976-1995 in our archive
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Balayi is a Nyungar word meaning Lookout or
Beware! Balayi is produced by Jumbunna, Indigenous
House of Learning at UTS and challenges its readers
and contributors to be alert to injustice in the
relationship between Indigenous and non-Indigenous
Australians, and offers an invitation to speak about
this injustice.
Previous volumes are available online at:
http://www.jumbunna.uts.edu.au/journals/balayi.html
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Deadly Vibe is a national Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander magazine, that contains
articles on health, sport, music and lifestyle.
Teacher's classroom activities related to each
month's Deadly Vibe are available at
http://www.vibe.com.au/school_new/classactivities/index.asp
For more information about Deadly Vibe and the
other activities undertaken by Vibe Australia check
out their website at:
http://www.vibe.com.au/ |
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The Indigenous Law Bulletin is a publication of
the
Indigenous
Law Centre, a research centre affiliated with
the Faculty of Law, University of New South Wales.
The ILB started as the Aboriginal Law Bulletin in
1981. The ILB has its own website at
http://www.ilb.unsw.edu.au/.
The full contents of past issues are available
online at
http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/ILB/
Australian Indigenous Law Reporter
Australian Indigenous Law Reporter (AILR)
is a quarterly peer-reviewed publication of the
Indigenous Law Centre, a research centre affiliated
with the Law Faculty of the University of New South
Wales, that was published from 1996-2005. The
journal is still being published under the name Australian Indigenous Law Review.
We do not have a current subscription to the AILR,
but a full-text archive from 1996-2005 is available
at
http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/AILR/.
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The Griffith Review celebrates
good writing and promotes public debate. It steps
back from the issues of the day and gives writers
the space to grow on the page.
Essays reflect on the underlying significance of
events and trends, explain the details that get lost
in the news and examine the unintended consequences
of public policy.
Published by Griffith University, abstracts of
previous issues are available at:
http://www3.griffith.edu.au/01/griffithreview/ |
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The Journal of Indigenous Policy has been
established to provide a forum for intellectual
discourse on Indigenous policy development and
implementation as it affects the lives of Aboriginal
and Torres Strait Islander peoples in Australia. JIP
is produced by Jumbunna, Indigenous House of
Learning at UTS. Previous issues are available
online at:
http://www.jumbunna.uts.edu.au/journals/jip.html |
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Kanunnah is the peer-reviewed journal of the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery.
Papers published in the journal cover the areas of research undertaken by the
Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery. These areas includes papers on the life
sciences (including botany), history and the arts and often have a Tasmanian,
southern Australian or sub Antarctic focus.
http://museumshop.tmag.tas.gov.au/store/viewItem.shop?idProduct=72
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The Koori Mail, Australia's national Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander newspaper.
Produced fortnightly, Koori Mail is distributed
Australia-wide, providing news, views, advertisements
and other material of vital interest to Indigenous
Australians and Australians interested in Indigenous
affairs. Published since 1991, the Koori Mail has grown to the point where it is recognised
as 'The Voice of Indigenous Australia'.
More information available at
http://www.koorimail.com/. Search the contents of
Koori Mail at
Infokoori.
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Tasmania 40° South is a magazine that celebrates all
that is good about Australia’s island state. Richly
illustrated with superb photographs. Tasmania 40° South
presents the wilderness, wildlife, culture, industry,
landscapes and people of Tasmania. The current issue,
number 47, contains an article about the bark canoe
built for the new Aboriginal Gallery at the Tasmanian
Museum and Art Gallery.
Audio files and podcasts are available online at
http://www.fortysouth.com.au/podcast.html
Contents of past issues can be accessed at
http://www.fortysouth.com.au/
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