Dr Melina Ey

Dr Melina Ey

Lecturer

School of Environmental and Life Sciences

Career Summary

Biography

Melina is a cultural geographer working in the Discipline of Geography and Environmental Studies at the University of Newcastle. Her research traces practices of resistance, care and repair in a climate changing world, with particular focus on community-led and localised practices and responses. 

Melina's PhD research with communities opposing mining and extractive projects in NSW highlighted diverse, localised and inclusive activist practice, and foregrounded the importance of place-based relations and ethics in motivating and shaping activism and resistance. Her current research attends to more-than-human reparative openings in contexts of energy transition, and considers both how non-humans survive, adapt and care for place in spaces of contamination, as well as possibilities for non-human/human collaborations that cultivate and support care-full, nourishing and inclusive practices, relationships and communities. 


Qualifications

  • Doctor in Philosophy in Human Geography, University of Newcastle
  • Bachelor of Development Studies, University of Newcastle
  • Bachelor of Development Studies (Honours), University of Newcastle

Keywords

  • activism
  • care and repair
  • climate change
  • community transitions
  • cultural geography
  • environmental geographies
  • environmental humanities
  • human geography
  • more than human geographies
  • multispecies ethnography
  • resource extraction

Languages

  • English (Mother)

Fields of Research

Code Description Percentage
440610 Social geography 40
440601 Cultural geography 60

Professional Experience

UON Appointment

Title Organisation / Department
Lecturer University of Newcastle
School of Environmental and Life Sciences
Australia

Academic appointment

Dates Title Organisation / Department
1/2/2024 - 31/12/2024 Associate Editor Australian Geographer
Australia
1/7/2023 - 31/12/2024 Co-Convenor: Cultural Geography Study Group Institute of Australian Geographers
Australia

Awards

Recipient

Year Award
2024 Visiting Fellowship: Biodiverse Anthropocenes
The University of Oulu
2023 Artist Residency: Co-Awarded with Dr Penny Dunstan
LiddellWORKS Upper Hunter

Teaching Award

Year Award
2023 Outstanding Contribution to Teaching
College of Engineering, Science and Environment (CESE), University of Newcastle

Teaching

Code Course Role Duration
GEOG2130 Geographies of Development
College of Engineering, Science and Environment (CESE), University of Newcastle
This course analyses contemporary development issues from an historical and geographic perspective, and considers issues such as   food and nutrition, access to land and water, management of resources, situations of conflict, and health concerns. 
Lecturer 1/7/2022 - 31/12/2024
GEOG1030 Global Poverty and Development
College of Engineering, Science, & Environment (CESE), The University of Newcastle
Global Poverty and Development provides an introduction to development studies, with a wide consideration of social, economic, political, cultural and environmental issues. It also provides students with a base understanding of historical and contemporary theories and processes of development. 
Course Coordinator 1/1/2024 - 31/12/2024
GEOG1020 Introduction to Human Geography
College of Engineering, Science, & Environment (CESE), The University of Newcastle
This course provides an introduction to Human Geography, a diverse discipline that explores the relationships between people and places in the world we live in.
Course Coordinator 1/7/2022 - 31/12/2024
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Publications

For publications that are currently unpublished or in-press, details are shown in italics.


Journal article (8 outputs)

Year Citation Altmetrics Link
2025 Ey M, 'Extraction/Exclusion: Beyond Binaries of Exclusion and Inclusion in Natural Resource Extraction', The AAG Review of Books, 13, 25-27 (2025)
DOI 10.1080/2325548x.2024.2418057
2024 Ey M, ''Stuffed if I [still don't] know': towards weak methodologies', SOCIAL & CULTURAL GEOGRAPHY, 25, 1631-1649 (2024) [C1]
DOI 10.1080/14649365.2024.2353590
Citations Scopus - 1
2020 Ey M, Mee K, Allison J, Caves S, Crosbie E, Hughes A, Curtis F, Doney R, Dunstan P, Jones R, Tyndall A, Baker T, Cameron J, Duffy M, Dufty-Jones R, Dunn K, Hodge P, Kearnes M, McGuirk P, O’Neill P, Ruming K, Sherval M, Williams M, Wright S, 'Becoming Reading Group: reflections on assembling a collegiate, caring collective', Australian Geographer, 51, 283-305 (2020) [C1]
DOI 10.1080/00049182.2020.1759181
Citations Scopus - 9Web of Science - 7
Co-authors Sarah Wright, Michelle Duffy, Paul Hodge, Meg Sherval, Kathy Mee
2020 Ey M, 'If women are everywhere: tracing the multiplicity of women's resistance to extraction in NSW, Australia', GENDER PLACE AND CULTURE, 28, 397-419 (2020) [C1]
DOI 10.1080/0966369X.2020.1724897
Citations Scopus - 3Web of Science - 4
2019 Ey M, 'Purling politics: Crafting resistance with the Knitting Nannas Against Gas', ACME, 18, 956-976 (2019) [C1]
Citations Scopus - 6
2018 Ey M, '“Soft, airy fairy stuff”? Re-evaluating 'social impacts’ in gendered processes of natural resource extraction', Emotion, Space and Society, 27, 1-8 (2018) [C1]
DOI 10.1016/j.emospa.2018.02.002
Citations Scopus - 2Web of Science - 1
2017 Ey M, Sherval M, Hodge P, 'Value, Identity and Place: unearthing the emotional geographies of the extractive sector', AUSTRALIAN GEOGRAPHER, 48, 153-168 (2017) [C1]
DOI 10.1080/00049182.2016.1251297
Citations Scopus - 3Web of Science - 26
Co-authors Paul Hodge, Meg Sherval
2016 Ey M, Sherval M, 'Exploring the minescape: engaging with the complexity of the extractive sector', AREA, 48, 176-182 (2016) [C1]

This paper introduces the concept of the minescape as a conceptual and imaginative tool through which to integrate and represent growing shifts in the way natural resou... [more]

This paper introduces the concept of the minescape as a conceptual and imaginative tool through which to integrate and represent growing shifts in the way natural resource extraction is understood. In recent years, traditional perceptions of extractive processes as 'natural' and purely economic in nature have been increasingly challenged by new developments within the fields of human geography and anthropology. Likewise, growing insights into the multifaceted socio-cultural terrain of extractive operations, and burgeoning work on the interplay of materiality and discourse within the extractive sector, have also transformed the way that extractive processes (and their potentialities) are being conceptualised. The concept of the minescape aims to draw together significant insights concerning the extractive sector, which are increasingly being deployed when representing extractive spaces. Appropriating the term from its current use in fine art, the minescape joins a number of recent appropriations of the 'scapes' suffix to capture the expanding analytical scope of extractive sector inquiry. In essence, the minescape stands as a representational tool that underscores the intricate ways in which extractive processes are imbued with complex socio-cultural dynamics, and powerful material and discursive elements.

DOI 10.1111/area.12245
Citations Scopus - 5Web of Science - 37
Co-authors Meg Sherval
Show 5 more journal articles
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Dr Melina Ey

Position

Lecturer
School of Environmental and Life Sciences
College of Engineering, Science and Environment

Contact Details

Email melina.ey@newcastle.edu.au

Office

Room SR291
Building Social Science
Location Callaghan Campus
University Drive
Callaghan, NSW 2308
Australia
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