News & publications
Research publications
- Knight, K. N., Poelina, A., & Wooltorton, S. (2025). Seeing, feeling, and hearing the world. A regenerative worldview: rinyi, pirlirr and liyan. Australian journal of environmental education, FirstView. https://doi.org/10.1017/aee.2024.73
- Poelina, A., Toussaint, S., & Muecke, S. (2023). ‘Why can't we speak up for ourselves…?’ Water Futures and Ethnographic Provocations. Oceania, 93(3), 366-376. https://doi.org/10.1002/ocea.5374
- Poelina, A., Muecke, S., & Toussaint, S. (2023). A Martuwarra Serpent stirs in its sleep... Enduring creation stories in times of crisis. Griffith Review, 80, 34-41. A Martuwarra Serpent stirs in its sleep… - republished with permission
- Poelina, A., Perdrisat, M., Wooltorton, S., & Mulligan, E. L. (2023). Feeling and Hearing Country as Research Method. Environmental Education Research, 1-16. https://doi.org/10.1080/13504622.2023.2239531
- Wooltorton, S., Poelina, A., & Claire, H. (2023). Kincentric geography and reindigenization: Coming home to family. In P. Reason, F. Mathews, S. Harding, A. Weber, & S. Wooltorton (Eds.), Learning how land speaks. Sub-stack. https://peterreason.substack.com/p/kincentric-geography-and-re-indigenization
Newsletters
The team of researchers want to keep you up to date with the progress of their research. View the current newsletters on the research and progress so far.
- Newsletter 1: September 2023
- Newsletter 2: February 2024
- Newsletter 3: September 2024
- Newsletter 4: December 2024
If you would like to stay in the loop with Intergenerational Cultural Transfer of Indigenous Knowledge news and publications, please contact us to sign up for the newsletter.
Acknowledgement of Country
The Nulungu Research Institute is located on Yawuru land, encompassing the coastal town of Broome. Western Australian Aboriginal saltwater, river and desert language groups across the Kimberley and Aboriginal language groups of the Great Western Woodlands sustain intergenerational cultural, intellectual and social affiliations over time.
Researchers and associates of the project: Intergenerational Cultural Transfer of Indigenous Knowledges pay respect to all cultural custodians of the Aboriginal nations in which this project is situated - to past, present and emerging generations. Traditional knowledge and expertise, evident throughout the Kimberley and Great Western Woodlands – is vital to the sustainability of places, cultures and futures.

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