Professor Pamela Nilan
Conjoint Professor
School of Humanities, Creative Ind and Social Sci (Sociology and Anthropology)
- Email:pamela.nilan@newcastle.edu.au
- Phone:(02) 4921 5912
Young at heart
Professor Pam Nilan contributes a unique sociologist's viewpoint to the body of research on youth cultures in the Asia-Pacific region.
It was a trip around Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand and Singapore in her twenties that ignited Pam Nilan's love affair with Asian culture and society. Fast forward to 2013 and Professor Nilan is fluent in Indonesian and still finds Asia "utterly compelling".
As a youth sociologist with a passion for Indonesia, Professor Pam Nilan has devoted much of her academic career to studying young people both in Australia and abroad and still finds them "infinitely interesting".
"Someone once suggested to me that at my age I should start studying older people - but it is youth and youth culture that excites me," Professor Nilan says.
"I have always been intrigued by the transition from childhood to adulthood - that age where people are still childlike in their openness to new ideas but at the same time socially active and engaging with the world. It is a really interesting cusp that enables them to look backwards and forwards at the same time. I never tire of studying it."
Professor Nilan is currently a Chief Investigator on an ARC Discovery Grant: Fostering Pro-Environment Consciousness and Practice: Environmentalism, Environmentality and Environmental Education in Indonesia.
The project aims to foster environmental awareness in Indonesia by investigating how some people have become environmentally aware, and by evaluating various environmental education and activism projects.
"I've noticed over the past three years more young people are espousing environmental causes in Asia such as rehabilitation of rainforests, preservation of native species, limiting of palm oil plantations and reducing air pollution," Professor Nilan says.
"Young people in Indonesia are quite connected to environmental causes but don't tend to get involved in mass rallies or protests. They use more creative ideas to get their message across, such as making music about environmental causes and forming large teams to conduct 'friendly' clean up campaigns with local councils."
"We're seeing the dawn of a new environmental consciousness in Indonesia with the birth of ideas around cleaning up the local area, taking public transport and riding bikes – it's the reinvention of a new aspect of youth culture," Professor Nilan says.
Youth, gender, formation of identity and popular culture are strong themes in the substantial research portfolio Professor Nilan has amassed, which includes co-authorship of three books on Australian and global youth culture. She also recently co-authored a book on adolesence in Indonesia.
Her love of Southeast Asia and the cultures of the Asia-Pacific region is also reflected in her research work, which has taken her to Indonesia, Vietnam and Fiji to undertake significant sociological studies.
She has also completed a major two-year project funded by AusAID called Masculinities and Violence in Indonesia and India, which followed on from her previous Indonesia-based studies on adolescent culture and masculinities of young men. Pam was a Chief Investigator on the Indonesian component of the study and project leader of the international team of researchers.
"Indonesia and India have histories of civil violence but most of the past research has been around aspects like religiously motivated violence, mass insurgencies or domestic violence - the role of masculinity and its constructions had not been considered," Pam explains.
"We looked at the question of why some men stand back and watch violence and others get involved. To understand that you need to see violence as a form of cultural repertoire, something that can, in certain situations, win respect and bring rewards."
While unemployment and poverty were acknowledged as contributing factors to violence, the research led to some interesting observations on links between low socio-economic status and violence.
"What I have found, both from our data and wider studies, is that there isn't a direct correlation," Pam says. "In areas where everybody is poor, you don't have a high incidence of violence. Where you do see more frequent violence is where there are discrepancies in the socio-economic status of people in the same community - so it is more about inequality of status than poverty per se."
In 2012 she undertook an Australian-embassy sponsored lecture tour through Indonesia with colleague Dr Argyo Demartoto, of Central Java's University Sebelas Maret, to present their findings on masculinity and violence in Indonesia to a wide audience of academics, students, government officials and representatives of aid and development organisations.
Having studied and written on Indonesia since 1995, Professor Nilan's insight into the country is frequently sought by the media and policy makers and she has worked as a consultant to the Australian government and AusAID. Her work brings a unique specialty to FEDUA's research profile - and has fostered academic exchange between students and researchers from Newcastle and Indonesia."Indonesia is a vast, diverse and really fascinating country but it is a country the average Australian still doesn't know a lot about," says Pam, "I think it is important for Australia's role in the region to have people like me who continue to research there and feed knowledge back to the academic community."
Young at heart
Professor Pam Nilan contributes a unique sociologist's viewpoint to the body of research on youth cultures in the Asia-Pacific region.
Career Summary
Biography
Pam Nilan is Professor of Sociology in the School of Humanities and Social Science at the University of Newcastle, and Adjunct Fellow in Asian Studies at the University of Western Australia (2013-2016). She is currently the Treasurer of the Asia-Pacific Sociological Association. Professor Nilan is an experienced youth researcher, who has worked in Australia, Vietnam, Fiji and Indonesia. In the youth research field she focuses on school-to-work transitions, gender, class and popular culture. Her current research endeavours are focused in Indonesia. She has published numerous articles in refereed journals and contributed many book chapters to edited collections. She has been a co-author on four books. Professor Nilan is currently a Chief Investigator on an ARC-funded Discovery Grant: Fostering Pro-Environment Consciousness and Practice: Environmentalism, Environmentality and Environmental Education in Indonesia. She has been a Chief Investigator on four previous externally-funded project grants. Professor Nilan has supervised ten Ph.D and M.Phil theses to completion. In 2012 she received the Vice-Chancellor’s Award for Supervision Excellence in the Faculty of Education and Arts. She was instrumental in developing the Graduate Certificate and Master of Social Change and Development. This program sequence currently has over 75 fee-paying postgraduate coursework students enrolled, including both on-campus international students and online distance education students. In 2010 Professor Nilan spent her sabbatical leave in Europe, where she spent four months teaching undergraduate Indonesian society and culture subjects to students at l'Universite de La Rochelle in France. She was also a research fellow at KITLV in Leiden during this period. Since 2005, Professor Nilan has worked in January each year as a member of the Jakarta Selection Team to interview AusAID-funded Australian Development Scholarship applicants for Indonesia.
Research ExpertiseDr Nilan has research expertise in the following fields: youth; gender and development; identity and popular culture; and school-to-work transition. She has expertise in mixed methods (quantitative and qualitative) research in Australia and in selected countries of the Asia-Pacific region. She has further expertise in working with large external, non-profit-making, organisations.
Teaching Expertise
Dr Nilan has teaching expertise in the subjects of Introductory Sociology, Social Theory, Research Methodology, Youth Studies, Gender and Development, Indonesian Society and Culture.
Administrative Expertise
Dr Nilan has had extensive administration and governance expertise in universities. In administration, she was Convenor of the Graduate Certificate and Master of Social Change and Development postgraduate coursework programs for six years. In governance, she has been Deputy Dean (2 years), elected Faculty member of Academic Senate (3 years), Deputy Head of School for Research Training (3 years). She is currently Assistant Dean for Research and Research Training in the Faculty of Education and Arts (2 year appointment).
Collaborations
Dr Nilan has conducted research collaboration with fellow investigators in Australia, the Asia-Pacific region, France and The Netherlands. She has collaborated on research projects and initiatives with researchers from the following academic and research institutions: Australian National University University of Western Australia La Trobe University Wollongong University Fiji University of Technology (Fiji) Universitas Hasannudin (Indonesia) Universitas Pendidikan Ganesha (Indonesia) Universitas Sebelas Maret (Indonesia) Universitas Indonesia L'Universite de La Rochelle (France) KITLV (Leiden, The Netherlands) Dr Nilan has also conducted applied research and scholarship in conjunction with the following: Department of Immigration and Citizenship (Australia) Australian Agency for International Development (Australia) United Nations Development Program (UNDP).
Qualifications
- PhD, University of Newcastle
- Master of Education, University of New England
- Bachelor of Education, University of New England
Keywords
- Development Studies
- Gender and Development
- Identity and Popular Culture
- Introductory Sociology
- School-to-Work Transition
- Social Change in the Asia-Pacific Region
- Youth
Languages
- French (Fluent)
- Indonesian (Fluent)
Professional Experience
Academic appointment
Dates | Title | Organisation / Department |
---|---|---|
1/1/2004 - | Membership - Asian Studies Association of Australia | Asian Studies Association of Australia Australia |
1/1/2002 - | Membership - International Sociology Association | International Sociology Association Australia |
1/1/1996 - | Membership - Asia-Pacific Sociological Association | Asia-Pacific Sociological Association Australia |
1/1/1992 - | Membership - The Australian Sociology Association | The Australian Sociology Association Australia |
1/1/1990 - 1/12/1991 | Lecturer | University of New England School of Social and Cultural Studies |
Awards
Research Award
Year | Award |
---|---|
1990 |
Award for Outstanding Educational Research New South Wales Institute of Educational Research |
1989 |
Commonwealth Postgraduate Study Award for Masters Degree Commonwealth Government |
Invitations
External Reviewer - Programs
Year | Title / Rationale |
---|---|
2009 |
draft Asia-Pacific Human Development Report on Gender, Power and Voice in the Asia-Pacific region Organisation: UNDP Description: Invited peer reviewer |
PhD Examiner
Year | Title / Rationale |
---|---|
2009 |
‘Riding the Global Wave: Male Youth, Tourist Encounters and Subcultural Formation in Kerala, South India’ Organisation: University of Wollongong Description: Invited examiner |
2008 |
‘Muslim Youth in Hong Kong’ Organisation: University of Queensland Description: Invited examiner |
2007 |
‘In the System but Out of Place: Understanding Street-Frequenting Young People in Suva, Fiji’ Organisation: University of Queensland Description: Invited examiner |
2007 |
‘The Quest for Indonesian Islam: Contestation and Consensus Concerning Veiling’ Organisation: Australian National University Description: Invited examiner |
Research Masters Examiner
Year | Title / Rationale |
---|---|
2006 |
‘The Construction of Women in Post-New Order Indonesian Cinema’ Organisation: Curtin University Description: Invited examiner |
2005 |
Suzie Handajani, Globalizing Local Girls: The Representation of Adolescents in Indonesian Female Teen Magazines Organisation: University of Western Australia Description: Invited examiner |
Speaker
Year | Title / Rationale |
---|---|
2011 |
‘The Future of Youth Sociology: Global Doubts’ Organisation: The Australian Sociological Association conference, Macquarie University Description: Personal invitation to present to Workshop Panel on the Future of Youth Sociology |
2010 |
‘Challenging Stereotypes: Young Gays and Lesbians in Indonesia’ Organisation: Vrije University Amsterdam Description: Personal invitation to present at the Southeast Asia Update Seminar |
Publications
For publications that are currently unpublished or in-press, details are shown in italics.
Book (6 outputs)
Year | Citation | Altmetrics | Link | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2017 |
Nilan PM, Muslim Youth in the Diaspora: Challenging Extremism Through Popular Culture, Routledge, Abingdon, Oxon, 216 (2017) [A1]
|
Nova | ||||||
2016 |
Nilan P, Foreword (2016)
|
|||||||
2016 |
Feixa C, Leccardi C, Nilan P, Youth, space and time: Agoras and chronotopes in the global city (2016) This book engages with the experience of space and time in youth cultures across the world. Putting together contemporary case studies on young cosmopolitans, young glocals and yo... [more] This book engages with the experience of space and time in youth cultures across the world. Putting together contemporary case studies on young cosmopolitans, young glocals and young protesters in cities on five continents, it analyzes new agoras in global cities.
|
|||||||
2013 |
Parker L, Nilan PM, Adolescents in Contemporary Indonesia, Routledge, Abingdon, Ox, 205 (2013) [A1]
|
Nova | ||||||
2007 | Nilan PM, Julian R, Germov JB, Australian Youth: Social and Cultural Issues, Pearson Education Australia, Frenchs Forest, NSW, 272 (2007) [A2] | |||||||
2006 |
Feixa C, Nilan P, Postscript: Global youth and transnationalism: The next generation (2006)
|
|||||||
Show 3 more books |
Chapter (31 outputs)
Year | Citation | Altmetrics | Link | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2022 |
Nilan P, 'A new Muslim youth culture', Routledge Handbook of Islam In The West: Second Edition 435-447 (2022) [B1] Muslim youth culture has expanded across the world in the last three decades, in keeping with the revitalization of Islam. Through the appropriation of popular culture, Muslim you... [more] Muslim youth culture has expanded across the world in the last three decades, in keeping with the revitalization of Islam. Through the appropriation of popular culture, Muslim youth engages a positive youth identity with attractive lifestyle options. For them, popular cultural practice can be ludic and pious at the same time. Music is a key component of contemporary youth culture worldwide. It is also a vital element of vibrant Muslim youth culture, offline and online. In Western countries, young Muslims use popular music to engage with intolerance, Islamophobia and lack of opportunities. Two kinds of Muslim popular music are discussed in this chapter: the nasheed form (reinvented) and Islamised genres; punk, hip hop and heavy metal. New Muslim youth culture is identified as an enriching core of creative practice.
|
|||||||
2020 |
Nilan P, 'Youth transitions and youth culture', Public Socology: An introduction to Australian society, 4th edition 126-141 (2020) The age of eighteen is usually taken to signify a point of transition for a young Australian. The inner lives of young people frequently do not match the normative ideas that othe... [more] The age of eighteen is usually taken to signify a point of transition for a young Australian. The inner lives of young people frequently do not match the normative ideas that others may have about them. The same point can be made about all aspects of the youth transition to adulthood: moving from education to work; moving out of home; and moving into an intimate relationship. Youth culture is not just about style preferences, however; it has substance. Peer groups associated with different youth cultures provide reassurance and stability (ontological security) during the transition to adult citizenship. Two decades of new information and communication technologies have altered the space and time dimensions of young people¿s lives. They are immersed in a media-rich environment, using phones and computers, playing online games, and operating in constant communication with their friends through Web 2.0/3.0 devices.
|
|||||||
2020 |
Batan CM, Cooper A, Côté JE, France A, Gilbert-Roberts TA, Hettige S, et al., 'Global South Youth Studies, Its Forms and Differences among the South, and between the North and South', The Oxford Handbook of Global South Youth Studies 55-76 (2020) [B1] This essay comprises reflections of scholars in and originating from the Global South, plus some comments from Northern scholars, forming an integrated dialogue. It focuses on the... [more] This essay comprises reflections of scholars in and originating from the Global South, plus some comments from Northern scholars, forming an integrated dialogue. It focuses on the development of youth studies in Africa, Latin America, parts of Asia, and the Caribbean, illuminating how youth studies in, from, and for the South emerge as a result of struggle-to get recognition, to theorize beyond dominant Northern frameworks, and state-led developments, and to be heard. Paradoxically, youth studies from the South are strongly influenced by the work of Northern scholars. Despite these influences, Northern ideas struggle to grasp local contexts and conditions and consequently there is a need for more localized knowledge and theorizing to make sense of young people¿s lives outside the Global North. The reflections provide a reminder that struggles over the meaning and situation of youth, within particular contexts, are highly political.
|
|||||||
2016 |
Nilan PM, Parker L, Robinson K, Bennett L, 'Contemporary Indonesian youth transitions: Trends and inequalities', Youth Identities and Social transformations in Modern Indonesia, Brill, Leiden, The Netherlands 23-46 (2016) [B1]
|
Nova | ||||||
2016 |
Nilan PM, 'Local modernities: young women socializing together', Youth Identities and Social Transformations in Modern Indonesia, Brill, Leiden, The Netherlands 156-175 (2016) [B1]
|
Nova | ||||||
2016 |
Nilan PM, Leccardi C, Feixa C, 'Introduction: chronotopes of youth', Youth, Space and Time: Agoras and Chronotopes in the Global City, Brill, Leiden, Netherlands 1-16 (2016) [B1]
|
Nova | ||||||
2016 |
Nilan PM, 'Space, time and symbol in urban Indonesian schoolboy gangs', Youth, Space and Time: Agoras and Chronotopes in the Global City, Brill, Leiden, The Netherlands 237-258 (2016) [B1]
|
Nova | ||||||
2015 |
Nilan P, Threadgold SR, 'The moral economy of the mosh pit: straight edge, reflexivity and classification struggles', Youth Cultures and Subcultures: Australian Perspectives, Ashgate, Farnham, UK 77-88 (2015) [B1]
|
Nova | ||||||
2015 |
Threadgold SR, Nilan PM, 'Applying Theoretical Paradigms to Indonesian Youth in Reflexive Modernity', Youth Cultures, Transitions, and Generations: Bridging the Gap in Youth Research, Palgrave Macmllan, Houndsmill, UK 157-170 (2015) [B1]
|
Nova | ||||||
2015 |
Threadgold SR, Nilan P, Putu LP, 'Contemporary Balinese Cruise Ship Workers, Passengers and Employers: Colonial Patterns of Domesic Service', Colonization and Domestic Service: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives, Routledge, New York 309-327 (2015) [B1]
|
Nova | ||||||
2015 |
Nilan PM, 'Youth culture in/beyond Indonesia: Hybridity or assemblage?', A Critical Youth Studies for the 21st Century, Brill, The Hague 267-283 (2015) [B1]
|
Nova | ||||||
2014 | Nilan PM, 'Studying Indonesian Muslim Masculinities in Indonesia and Australia', Studying Islam in practice, Routledge, London 98-109 (2014) [B1] | Nova | ||||||
2014 |
Nilan PM, Demartoto A, Wibowo A, 'Youthful Warrior Masculinities in Indonesia', Masculinities in a Global Era, Springer, New York 69-84 (2014) [B1]
|
Nova | ||||||
2013 | Nilan PM, 'Une nouvelle identité chez les jeunes Javanais?', Enjeux Identitaires, Indes savantes, Paris 61-77 (2013) [B1] | Nova | ||||||
2012 |
Nilan PM, 'Young women and everyday media engagement in Muslim Southeast Asia', Women and the media in Asia: The precarious self, Palgrave Macmillan, London 77-95 (2012) [B1]
|
Nova | ||||||
2012 |
Nilan PM, 'Hybridity', Keywords in youth studies: Tracing affects, movements, knowledges, Routledge, New York 252-257 (2012) [B1]
|
Nova | ||||||
2011 | Nilan PM, 'Youth transitions and youth culture', Public Sociology: An Introduction to Australian Society, Allen & Unwin, Crows Nest, NSW 109-124 (2011) [B2] | Nova | ||||||
2009 |
Nilan PM, Donaldson M, Howson R, 'Indonesian muslim masculinities in Australia', Migrant Men: Critical Studies of Masculinities and the Migration Experience, Routledge, London 172-189 (2009) [B1]
|
Nova | ||||||
2008 |
Nilan PM, Utari P, 'Meanings of work for female media and communication workers', Women and Work in Indonesia, Routledge, London 136-154 (2008) [B1]
|
Nova | ||||||
2008 |
Nilan PM, 'Muslim media and youth in globalizing Southeast Asia', Media Consumption and Everyday Life in Asia, Routledge, London 45-58 (2008) [B1]
|
Nova | ||||||
2007 | Nilan PM, 'Youth culture', Public Sociology: An Introduction to Australian Society, Allen & Unwin, Crows Nest 111-127 (2007) [B2] | |||||||
2007 |
Nilan PM, Utari P, 'Media and communications work in Indonesia: Transformation and challenges for women', Globalisation and Work in Asia, Chandos Publishing, Oxford, United Kingdom 225-248 (2007) [B1]
|
Nova | ||||||
2006 |
Nilan PM, 'The reflexive youth culture of devout Muslim youth in Indonesia', Global Youth? Hybrid identities, plural worlds, Routledge, London 91-110 (2006) [B1]
|
Nova | ||||||
2006 |
Nilan PM, 'Mediating the Entrepreneurial Self: Romance Texts and Young Indonesian Women', Medi@sia: Global media/tion in and out of context, Routledge, London 62-81 (2006) [B1]
|
Nova | ||||||
2005 | Nilan PM, 'The Viability of Aid Scholarship-Funded Study in Australian Universities: The Case of Indonesia', Internationalizing Higher Education : critical explorations of pedagogy and policy, Springer, Berlin 159-180 (2005) [B1] | Nova | ||||||
2004 | Nilan PM, ''Reality TV'? School Students and Popular Culture', Sociology of Education - Possibilities and Practices, Social Science Press, Melbourne 306-321 (2004) [B1] | |||||||
2003 | Nilan PM, 'The Social Meanings of Media for Indonesian Youth', Globalisation, Culture and Inequality in Asia, Trans Pacific Press, Melbourne 168-190 (2003) [B1] | Nova | ||||||
2000 | Nilan PM, 'I Was Never a Dress Person: Lesbian Stories from the Newcastle/Hunter Region', Out in the Valley: Hunter Gay and lesbian Histories, Newcastle Region Public Library, Newcastle 336 (2000) [B1] | |||||||
Show 28 more chapters |
Journal article (85 outputs)
Year | Citation | Altmetrics | Link | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2024 |
Mansfield M, Nilan P, Wibawanto GR, 'Rebel imaginings: street art in Yogyakarta, Indonesia', Visual Studies, 39 239-253 (2024) [C1] Street art in the Indonesian city of Yogyakarta is popular, dynamic and vibrant. Like other cities such as Buenos Aires, it has become something of a tourist attraction in its own... [more] Street art in the Indonesian city of Yogyakarta is popular, dynamic and vibrant. Like other cities such as Buenos Aires, it has become something of a tourist attraction in its own right. This article examines Yogyakarta street art as a visual phenomenon that activates political change potential in three ways. First, it provokes the critical consideration of ordinary people who pass by the walls and surfaces of the city every day. Second, it suggests alternative futures within the context of achieving social justice and redress of past wrongs. Third, it challenges the mainstream elite artworld of Indonesia that is anchored in galleries and commodification. Street artists constitute their grassroots art practice collectively, offline and online. Data was gathered ethnographically over two years. Analysis of data proceeds in the form of rhizoanalysis, in keeping with a non-representational framework drawn from the work of Deleuze and Guattari. The street art of Yogyakarta is considered as an assemblage, one characterised by the creative process of (political) becoming. The street artworks generate meaning through visual juxtapositions, gags and texts that imply lines of flight into a future generated by radical questioning. We argue that Yogyakarta street art can be read as a form of rebel imaginings.
|
Nova | |||||||||
2023 |
Nilan P, Roose J, Peucker M, Turner BS, 'Young Masculinities and Right-Wing Populism in Australia', Youth, 3 285-299 [C1]
|
||||||||||
2023 |
Azca MN, Putri RD, Nilan P, 'Gendered youth transitions in local jihad in Indonesia: negotiating agency in arranged marriage', Journal of Youth Studies, (2023) [C1] In accounts of local Islamist jihad, little attention has been directed to how young women exercise agency when they face arranged marriages with jihadi fighters. They undergo a d... [more] In accounts of local Islamist jihad, little attention has been directed to how young women exercise agency when they face arranged marriages with jihadi fighters. They undergo a different kind of life transition, one that has rarely been examined in youth studies. This paper reports on a study of how young female Muslims in arranged marriages with mujahidin men navigated their transitions to adulthood in Eastern Indonesia. The study employed an ethnographic approach, including live-in observation and interviews. The data was analysed using a biographical narrative approach. We found that some young local women were married off to previously unknown mujahidin men. As the Muslim¿Christian conflict raged around them, they navigated their roles of wife and mother while embedded in a jihadi network justified by Islamist ideology. Later, following the arrest of their husbands, they gained some agency and asserted a more independent adulthood by actively shaping their own life trajectories. The analysis extends our broader knowledge of (female) youth transitions in civil conflict situations in the Global South.
|
||||||||||
2023 |
Nilan P, Wibawanto GR, 'Catholic youth and nationalist identity in Java, Indonesia', Journal of Contemporary Religion, 38 41-60 (2023) [C1] With a focus on contemporary religion, this article considers Catholic youth in Muslim-majority Indonesia who are active in the public sphere and committed to the cause of nationa... [more] With a focus on contemporary religion, this article considers Catholic youth in Muslim-majority Indonesia who are active in the public sphere and committed to the cause of nationalist unity. A current push by Islamist extremists threatens and excludes those of other faiths. Young Catholics are sometimes made to feel as though they do not belong in the modern imaginings of caliphate and enforced Shari¿a law. They find the marginalisation deeply disturbing since they feel strong loyalty to the nation. Some turn inward, focusing on Catholic orthopraxy and service to the diocese. Others direct their energies to interfaith dialogue and alliance, seeking political influence through solidarity with moderate Muslims. A lived religion approach based on the work of Ammerman (2014) and Laksana and Wood (2019) allows us to understand the imbrication of Catholic and nationalist identities through the analysis of interview data.
|
Nova | |||||||||
2021 |
Nilan P, Wibowanto GR, 'Challenging islamist populism in indonesia through catholic youth activism', Religions, 12 (2021) [C1] This paper reports data from a study of young Catholic activists. They were concerned about the expansion of Islamist populism in democratic Muslim-majority Indonesia. They active... [more] This paper reports data from a study of young Catholic activists. They were concerned about the expansion of Islamist populism in democratic Muslim-majority Indonesia. They actively built inter-faith coalitions with local liberal Muslim youth groups and with pan-national Nahdlatul Ulama (NU), the largest independent Islamic organisation in the world. Islamist populism prioritises religious identity over the national identity of citizenship. In framing their citizenship activism against the current tide of Islamist populism, the informants in our study selectively engaged aspects of Catholic theology. They articulated their religious identity as coterminous with a nationalist identity centred on multi-faith tolerance and harmony. That discourse in itself refutes a key principle of Islamist populism in Indonesia, which argues for primordial entitlement.
|
||||||||||
2020 |
Nilan P, 'Muslim youth environmentalists in Indonesia', JOURNAL OF YOUTH STUDIES, 24 925-940 (2020) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2019 |
Alam M, Nilan P, Leahy T, 'Learning from greenpeace: Activist habitus in a local struggle', Electronic Green Journal, 1 1-18 (2019) [C1] This paper traces the ontogenesis of a specific environmental campaign in Indonesia. A highly effective struggle to save the local city forest was instigated by young activists in... [more] This paper traces the ontogenesis of a specific environmental campaign in Indonesia. A highly effective struggle to save the local city forest was instigated by young activists in Bandung who had previously been involved with Greenpeace Indonesia. The data comes from interviews, a focus group and ethnographic fieldwork. The paper illustrates the point that when youth get involved in a highly structured environmental protest movement like Greenpeace, the skills, network resources and confidence they gain there can later be deployed to great advantage in a local conservation campaign. That phenomenon can be understood using the notion of radical habitus derived from the theoretical work of Pierre Bourdieu. Its creation was reinforced by the dispositions developed through the young activists¿ previous involvement in Greenpeace training and activism. In the end, the development of the radical ecological habitus of young activists is formative for shaping a radical disposition, which can be deployed in the domain of protest.
|
Nova | |||||||||
2019 |
Nilan P, 'Indonesian youth, global environmentalism and transnational mining', Youth & Globalization, 1 166-186 (2019) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2019 |
Nilan P, Wibawanto GR, 'Career quandaries of activist environmental engineering graduates in Indonesia', Environmental Education Research, 25 1775-1789 (2019) [C1] This article reports on a study that aimed to investigate how young Indonesians might become environmentalists, and what happens when they do. It uses a Bourdieusian framework to ... [more] This article reports on a study that aimed to investigate how young Indonesians might become environmentalists, and what happens when they do. It uses a Bourdieusian framework to analyse interviews with six Indonesian environmental engineering students who took an active role in environmental conservation campaigns while studying at the prestigious University of Technology Bandung (ITB) in Indonesia. In 2014, they were pondering the challenge of negotiating an environmentally defensible career after graduation from their degree. Four years later, in 2018 follow-up contact, it was evident that while they still operated a moral responsibility of conservation and care for the natural world, not all of them had found the dream jobs they imagined as earnest undergraduates keen to protect the natural environment. Yet most had maintained their ¿ecological habitus¿ even as they sought to make good on the institutionalised cultural capital invested in their undergraduate degree in environmental engineering. This article examines that journey.
|
Nova | |||||||||
2018 |
Tagicakiverata IW, Nilan P, 'Veivosaki-yaga: a culturally appropriate Indigenous research method in Fiji', International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education, 31 545-556 (2018) [C1] This article reports on the development of a new culturally sensitive approach to collecting group discussion data in the Pacific: veivosaki-yaga. The new approach was developed d... [more] This article reports on the development of a new culturally sensitive approach to collecting group discussion data in the Pacific: veivosaki-yaga. The new approach was developed during a project on Technical and Vocational Education (TVET) in multicultural Fiji. One challenge was to gain understanding from villages of parental attitudes towards TVET. While focus groups proved to answer the purpose for Indian Fijian parents, they were deemed culturally inappropriate for Indigenous Fijian parents. As a ¿de-colonising¿ Pacific methodology, veivosaki-yaga was judged to offer a culturally appropriate framework. Arising from strategic communication conventions in Indigenous Fijian culture, veivosaki-yaga means ¿worthwhile discussion¿¿of serious topics. It differs from the now well-known Pacific methodology approach of talanoa, which is based on much more informal and free-flowing discussion. This paper does not engage the findings of the original project as such, but seeks to convey the value of a culturally appropriate methodological approach devised therein. It contributes to the currently evolving literature on Pacific methodologies in the field of qualitative educational research.
|
Nova | |||||||||
2018 |
Sutopo OR, Nilan P, 'The Constrained Position of Young Musicians in the Yogyakarta Jazz Community', ASIAN MUSIC, 49 34-57 [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2018 |
Alam M, Nilan P, 'The campaign to save the Bandung city forest in Indonesia: A cognitive praxis analysis of protest repertoires', Indonesia and the Malay World, 46 343-359 (2018) [C1] In 2007, Babakan Siliwangi city forest in Bandung came under threat of privatisation from a local corporation, PT EGI, which proposed hotel and commercial development. In the peri... [more] In 2007, Babakan Siliwangi city forest in Bandung came under threat of privatisation from a local corporation, PT EGI, which proposed hotel and commercial development. In the period 2012¿2013, the anti-corporatist, environmentalist group Backsilmove emerged to fight a successful campaign to save the forest for public use. Employing the ¿cognitive praxis¿ approach pioneered by [Eyerman and Jamison (1991. Social movements: a cognitive approach. University Park, PA: Penn State University Press)] to understand the work of social movements, this article explores the tactics and ideology used by young city forest activists in Bandung as they sought to educate and mobilise local residents. Through in-depth interviews and fieldwork from 2014 to 2015 with young activists from Backsilmove it became evident that, as a manifestation of cognitive praxis, certain repertoires of protest were mobilised to inculcate environmental values in the public about protecting the forest from commercialisation. Repertoires included: (a) a ¿long march¿ to attract public interest; (b) an enacted pantomime to draw attention to the profit-seeking capitalist alliance between the city government and the private sector; (c) production and free distribution of a scientific research publication outlining the impact of destructive development of the city forest. These protest repertoires had been acquired by the activists through previous structured training and actions with Greenpeace.
|
Nova | |||||||||
2018 |
Nilan P, 'Smoke gets in your Eyes: Student environmentalism in the Palembang haze in Indonesia', Indonesia and the Malay World, 46 325-342 (2018) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2017 |
Nilan P, 'The ecological habitus of Indonesian student environmentalism', Environmental Sociology, 3 370-380 (2017) This article considers the concept of ecological habitus in relation to pro-environmental discourses of Indonesian student activists. Further Bourdieusian concepts, cultural capit... [more] This article considers the concept of ecological habitus in relation to pro-environmental discourses of Indonesian student activists. Further Bourdieusian concepts, cultural capital, illusio, doxa and hysteresis, throw interpretive light on how well-educated young Indonesians struggle in the field of environmental activism. It first outlines the concept of ecological habitus in relation to pro-environmental activism and then provides a discussion of environmental activism in Indonesia, before moving to consider environmental awareness in Indonesian universities. The methodology is briefly described before findings are presented under three key headings of expressed concern: global warming, forest loss and garbage.
|
||||||||||
2017 |
Rahadianto Sutopo O, Threadgold S, Nilan P, 'Young Indonesian Musicians, Strategic Social Capital, Reflexivity, and Timing', Sociological Research Online, 22 186-203 (2017) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2017 |
Sharp M, Nilan P, 'Floorgasm: Queer(s), solidarity and resilience in punk', EMOTION SPACE AND SOCIETY, 25 71-78 (2017) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2017 |
Sutopo OR, Nilan P, Threadgold S, 'Keep the hope alive: young Indonesian musicians views of the future', Journal of Youth Studies, 20 549-564 (2017) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2016 |
Abdullah SZS, Nilan PM, Germov J, 'Postpartum dietary restrictions and taboos among Indigenous Temiar Women in the Peninsular Malaysia: a qualitative study', Malaysian Journal of Nutrition, 22 207-218 (2016) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2015 |
Sharp M, Nilan P, 'Queer punx: young women in the Newcastle hardcore space', Journal of Youth Studies, 18 451-467 (2015) [C1] This article investigates the ¿becoming¿ of queer female punx in the contemporary hardcore scene in a regional Australian city. Twelve young women aged 20¿30 years were interviewe... [more] This article investigates the ¿becoming¿ of queer female punx in the contemporary hardcore scene in a regional Australian city. Twelve young women aged 20¿30 years were interviewed about their experiences of queer identity. They emphasized their involvement in the music scene as a key catalyst for the development of a queer punk identity even though the local hardcore scene is male-dominated and homosocial. We find that these young female queer punx assert their identity through collectively summoning and synthesizing the counternormative resources of both queer and punk Do It Yourself (DIY) to configure the space of hardcore differently. Our findings confirm the durability of a playful, subversive punk ethos in constituting challenges to the normative.
|
Nova | |||||||||
2015 |
Nilan P, Wibawanto GR, '"Becoming" an environmentalist in Indonesia', Geoforum, 62 61-69 (2015) [C1] This article looks at how five environmental leaders in Jogjakarta became environmentally active, and at the groups and interventions they formed. Interview data are drawn from a ... [more] This article looks at how five environmental leaders in Jogjakarta became environmentally active, and at the groups and interventions they formed. Interview data are drawn from a broader project that aimed to find out what might turn an Indonesian person into someone who cares for the environment. It examines the journey in leadership as "becoming" in the terms of Deleuze and Guattari (1987); a journey constituted in the desire to make something different. Against a backdrop of day-today practices in Central Java that do not favour environmental conservation and sustainability, the five informants seized upon an idea, a praxis, and explored it in the company of like-minded others, to join or make an organisation or action dedicated to redressing environmental crisis or neglect.
|
Nova | |||||||||
2015 |
Nilan P, 'Discourses of non-formal pedagogy in two youth-oriented Indonesian environmental NGOs', Asian Social Science, 11 162-173 (2015) [C1] This article compares two youth-oriented ENGOs (Environmental Non-Government Organisations) in Indonesia. Comparative analysis focuses on how the two organisations provide discour... [more] This article compares two youth-oriented ENGOs (Environmental Non-Government Organisations) in Indonesia. Comparative analysis focuses on how the two organisations provide discourses that configure differently the pedagogic space of experiential learning for children and young people. Despite an apparent low level of environmental awareness generally among the Indonesian population there does seem to be some enthusiasm for environmental activities among certain groups of young people. However, it seems different kinds of young people are drawn to different kinds of environmental activities. Conceptually, if we accept that there is an imagined space of the nation (Anderson, 1991) we can logically propose an imagined national space of the physical environment. Thus different agents of change will imagine and configure this space differently so that certain kinds of engagement and learning follow. Escobar (1999) points out that what we perceive in the environment as ¿natural¿ is always also cultural and social. So for example, transnational logging companies understand the Indonesian forests as a natural resource to be exploited, while student nature-lover groups ¿ Mahasiswa Pencinta Alam ¿ constitute forests as recreational places to camp and walk in nature. This paper examines two ENGOs designed to appeal to young Indonesians: Sahabat Alam ¿ Friends of Nature - founded in 2008 by a 12 year old schoolgirl after Jakarta flooding, and Tanam Untuk Kehidupan ¿ Planting for Life ¿ an arts collective which aims for learning about the environment through creative practices and festivals in Salatiga.
|
Nova | |||||||||
2015 |
Lovat TJ, Nilan P, Hosseini H, Samarayi I, Mansfield M, Alexander W, 'Australian Muslim Jobseekers and Social Capital', Canadian Ethnic Studies, 47 165-185 (2015) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2015 |
Nilan PM, Burgess H, Hobbs M, Threadgold SR, Alexander W, 'Youth, Social Media, and Cyberbullying Among Australian Youth: 'Sick Friends'', Social Media + Society, 1 1-12 (2015) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2014 |
Artini LP, Nilan P, 'Learning to work on a cruise ship: Accounts from Bali', International Education Journal, 13 1-14 (2014) [C1] This article studies the motivations and the formal and informal learning contexts for well-educated, young Balinese from poorer areas who enroll in cruise ship training colleges.... [more] This article studies the motivations and the formal and informal learning contexts for well-educated, young Balinese from poorer areas who enroll in cruise ship training colleges. The major motivations were obtaining a high income and helping the family. While basic hospitality and tourism skills are acquired, trainees also named other capacities such as politeness, confidence and tricks, such as juggling, as advantageous. The work on board was acknowledged to be arduous and demanding. Physical and mental preparation was needed. On retirement from a cruise ship career, savings enable them to start a small business in Bali. However, many such small enterprises fail. We identify the need for further short course training and other support in post-cruise ship work business planning and management. |
||||||||||
2014 |
Nilan P, Demartoto A, Broom A, Germov J, 'Indonesian Men's Perceptions of Violence Against Women', Violence Against Women, 20 869-888 (2014) [C1] This article explores male perceptions and attitudes toward violence against women in Indonesia. It analyzes interview data from Indonesian men collected as part of a large multim... [more] This article explores male perceptions and attitudes toward violence against women in Indonesia. It analyzes interview data from Indonesian men collected as part of a large multimethod Australian government-funded project on masculinities and violence in two Asian countries. Reluctance to talk about violence against women was evident, and the accounts of those men who did respond referred to three justificatory discourses: denial, blaming the victim, and exonerating the male perpetrator. The findings support continuation of government and nongovernmental organization (NGO) projects aimed at both empowering women and reeducating men. © The Author(s) 2014.
|
Nova | |||||||||
2014 |
Nilan P, Mansfield MM, 'Youth culture and Islam in Indonesia', Wacana, 15 1-18 (2014) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2014 |
Demartoto A, Nilan P, Broom A, Germov J, 'Indonesian Men's Contrasting Perceptions of How to Deal with Local Violence', Asian Journal of Criminology, 9 125-142 (2014) [C1] This paper reports on data from a 2009-2010 project on masculinity and violence, part of which was conducted in Indonesia. The data here come from semi-structured interviews with ... [more] This paper reports on data from a 2009-2010 project on masculinity and violence, part of which was conducted in Indonesia. The data here come from semi-structured interviews with 86 men in five cities, with minor reference to survey findings. Using a Foucauldian interpretive framework, we focus primarily on how these Indonesian men view police intervention in comparison to resolving the problem of violence within their community through mediation. The issue here is that while community mediation approaches are regarded positively, at present, it only seems to be religious leaders who are trusted to resolve conflicts effectively through this approach. Suspicion of mediation interventions and other measures that are tied to the authority of the state means that the promise of service-oriented policing reforms may not be effectively implemented. © 2014 Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht.
|
Nova | |||||||||
2013 |
Lovat TJ, Nilan P, Hosseini Faradonbeh S, Samarayi I, Mansfield M, Alexander W, 'Discrimination in the Labour Market: Exposing Employment Barriers among Muslim Jobseekers in Australia', Issues in Social Science, 1 53-73 (2013) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2013 |
Lovat T, Nilan P, Hosseini SAH, Samarayi I, Mansfield MM, Alexander W, 'Australian Muslim Jobseekers: Equal Employment Opportunity and Equity in the Labor Market', Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs, 33 435-450 (2013) [C1] The experience of job market disadvantage is not a novel phenomenon for some in contemporary Australia, even in the face of embedded equal employment opportunity (EEO) ideals. Thi... [more] The experience of job market disadvantage is not a novel phenomenon for some in contemporary Australia, even in the face of embedded equal employment opportunity (EEO) ideals. This article addresses the phenomenon of persistent job market disadvantage for some minority groups by presenting new data from a major multi-method study on labor market obstacles for Muslims seeking jobs in Australia. Responses from jobseekers and employment service providers are analyzed together to consider how EEO principles are experienced by Muslims who engage with employment services and move in and out of the labor force. The article proposes that key EEO tenets-freedom from discrimination and support to overcome disadvantage-are not represented at present in many Muslim jobseeker experiences. Furthermore, these same EEO principles appear to be somewhat compromised in employment service provision to Muslim jobseekers and, by extension, to other disadvantaged minority jobseekers. We offer some suggestions as to how the spirit of EEO legislation might be better reflected in support of Muslim jobseekers. It is concluded that an all government approach may be needed to counter the deep mistrust of Muslims in Australian society. © 2013 Institute of Muslim Minority Affairs.
|
Nova | |||||||||
2013 |
Broom A, Sibbritt D, Nayar KR, Nilan PM, Kirby E, 'What factors predict exposure to caste, political and religious violence in India? A cross - Sectional survey of 1000 Indian men', Asian Social Science, 9 1-8 (2013) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2013 |
Nilan P, Demartoto A, Broom A, 'Masculinity, Violence and Socioeconomic Status in Indonesia', Culture, Society and Masculinities, 5 3-20 (2013) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2012 |
Nilan PM, 'Young, Muslim and looking for a job in Australia', Youth Studies Australia, 31 48-60 (2012) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2012 |
Nilan PM, Demartoto A, 'Patriarchal residues in Indonesia: Respect accorded senior men by junior men', European Journal of Social Sciences, 31 279-293 (2012) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2012 |
Broom A, Sibbritt DW, Nayar KR, Doron A, Nilan PM, 'Men's experiences of family, domestic and honour-related violence in Gujarat and Uttar Pradesh, India', Asian Social Science, 8 3-10 (2012) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2012 |
Nilan PM, Samarayi I, Lovat TJ, 'Female Muslim jobseekers in Australia: Liminality, obstacles and resilience', International Journal of Asian Social Science, 2 682-692 (2012) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2011 |
Artini LP, Nilan PM, Threadgold SR, 'Young Indonesian cruise workers, symbolic violence and international class relations', Asian Social Science, 7 3-14 (2011) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2011 | Nilan PM, 'Obstacles facing young Muslim jobseekers in Australia', Sociology Study, 1 58-64 (2011) [C1] | Nova | |||||||||
2011 |
Nilan PM, 'Book review: Maskulinitas: Culture, gender and politics in Indonesia', Anthropological Forum, 21 210-211 (2011) [C3]
|
||||||||||
2011 |
Nilan PM, 'Youth sociology must cross cultures', Youth Studies Australia, 30 20-26 (2011) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2011 |
Harris MA, Nilan PM, Kirby ER, 'Risk and risk management for Australian sex workers', Qualitative Health Research, 21 386-398 (2011) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2011 |
Nilan PM, Demartoto A, Wibowo A, 'Young men and peer fighting in Solo, Indonesia', Men and Masculinities, 14 470-490 (2011) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2011 |
Nilan PM, Parker L, Bennett L, Robinson K, 'Indonesian youth looking towards the future', Journal of Youth Studies, 14 709-728 (2011) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2009 |
Threadgold SR, Nilan PM, 'Reflexivity of contemporary youth, risk and cultural capital', Current Sociology, 57 47-68 (2009) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2009 |
Nilan PM, 'The 'spirit of education' in Indonesian Pesantren', British Journal of Sociology of Education, 30 219-232 (2009) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2009 |
Nilan PM, 'Indigenous Fijian female pupils and career choice: Explaining generational gender reproduction', Asia Pacific Journal of Education, 29 29-43 (2009) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2009 | Feixa C, Nilan PM, 'Una joventut global? Identitats hibrides, mons plurals', Revista d'Educacio Social, 43 13-27 (2009) [C2] | Nova | |||||||||
2009 |
Nilan PM, 'Handbook of critical and indigenous methodologies', Qualitative Health Research, 19 1788-1789 (2009) [C3]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2009 |
Nilan PM, 'Contemporary masculinities and young men in Indonesia', Indonesia and the Malay World, 37 327-344 (2009) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2009 | Nilan PM, 'Communication as culture', Jurnal Kommunikasi Massa, 2 165-171 (2009) [C2] | Nova | |||||||||
2008 |
Nilan PM, 'Youth transitions to urban, middle-class marriage in Indonesia: Faith, family and finances', Journal of Youth Studies, 11 65-82 (2008) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2008 | Tiyanto D, Pawito, Nilan PM, Hastjarjo S, 'Perceptions of Indonesian politics in the run-up to the 2009 general election', Asian Social Science, 4 107-117 (2008) [C1] | Nova | |||||||||
2008 | Nilan PM, Broom A, Demartoto A, Doron A, Nayar KR, Germov JB, 'Masculinities and violence in India and Indonesia: Identifying themes and constructs for research', Journal of Health and Development, 4 209-228 (2008) [C1] | ||||||||||
2007 |
Dunn M, Nilan PM, 'Balancing economic and other discourses in the internationalization of higher education in South Africa', International Review of Education, 53 265-281 (2007) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2006 |
Nilan PM, Cavu P, Tagicakiverata I, Hazelman E, 'White collar work: Career ambitions of Fiji final year school students', International Education Journal, 7 895-905 (2006) [C1]
|
||||||||||
2005 | Nilan PM, 'Popular Music and Dance in Urgan Fiji', Perfect Beat: the pacific journal of research into contemporary music and popular culture, 7 20-35 (2005) [C1] | Nova | |||||||||
2005 | Nilan PM, Utari P, 'When Discriminatory Employment Practices Persist: Female Media Workers in Indonesia', Pandora's Box: Special Issue - Women of the world, N/A 27-37 (2005) [C2] | ||||||||||
2004 |
Nilan PM, Threadgold SR, 'Young People, Habitus and Opinions about Politics', Melbourne Journal of Politics, 29 96-1113 (2004) [C1]
|
||||||||||
2004 | Nilan PM, 'Culturas Globales', Revista de Estudios de Juventud, 64 39-48 (2004) [C1] | ||||||||||
2004 | Nilan PM, 'The risky future of youth politics in Indonesia', R I M A: Review of Indonesian and Malaysian Affairs: a semi-annual survey of political, economic, social and cultural aspects of Indonesia and Malaysia, 38 173-194 (2004) [C1] | ||||||||||
2004 | Utari P, Nilan PM, 'The lucky few: Female graduates of communication studies in the Indonesian media industry', Asia Pacific Media Educator, 15 63-79 (2004) [C1] | ||||||||||
2003 |
Nilan PM, 'Teachers' work and Schooling in Bali', International Review of Education, 49 563-584 (2003) [C1]
|
||||||||||
2003 | Nilan PM, 'Romance magazines, television soap operas and young Indonesian women', Review of INdonesial and Malaysian Affairs, 37 45-69 (2003) [C1] | Nova | |||||||||
2002 |
Nilan P, ' Dangerous fieldwork re-examined: The question of researcher subject position', Qualitative Research, 2 363-386 (2002) This article takes two examples of trying to collect fieldwork data in dangerous or difficult circumstances in Bali and uses them to explore some issues central to qualitative res... [more] This article takes two examples of trying to collect fieldwork data in dangerous or difficult circumstances in Bali and uses them to explore some issues central to qualitative research. These issues include shifting researcher subject positions in qualitative sociology approaches, and the coherence and usefulness of data collected in chaotic or risky circumstances. Methodological practices such as reflexivity are considered, as well as the task of writing research accounts up from messy and chaotic data sets. It is concluded that data collected at moments of fieldwork crisis may not be particularly useful, except as a cultural reminder of the insider/outsider status of the researcher, and to inform more productive factual data collected after the event. © 2002, Sage Publications. All rights reserved.
|
||||||||||
2002 | Nilan PM, Dantes N, Komang Tantra D, Gede Widja I, 'Current problems and future possibilities in secondary school education and teacher training in Singaraja, Noth Bali', Jurnal Pendidikan Dan Pengajaran, 3 (35) 124-137 (2002) [C1] | ||||||||||
2001 |
Nilan P, 'Gendered dreams: Women watching sinetron (soap operas) on Indonesian TV', Indonesia and the Malay World, 29 85-98 (2001)
|
||||||||||
2001 | Nilan PM, 'Gendered Dreams:Women Watching 'Sinetron' (Soap Operas) on Indonesian TV', Indonesia and the Malay World, 29 (84) 85-98 (2001) [C1] | ||||||||||
2000 | Nilan PM, 'Representing Culture and Politics (or is it just entertainment?). Watching Indonesian TV in Bali', Review of Indonesian and Malaysian Affairs, 34 119-154 (2000) [C1] | Nova | |||||||||
1999 |
Nilan P, 'Gangland: Cultural elites and the new generationalism', JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY, 35 92-94 (1999)
|
||||||||||
1999 |
Nilan PM, ''You're Hopeless I Swear to God': Shifting masculinities in classroom talk', Gender and Education, 12:1 53-68 (1999) [C1]
|
||||||||||
1999 | Nilan PM, 'Young People and Globalizing Trends in Vietnam', Journal of Youth Studies, 2:3 353-370 (1999) [C1] | ||||||||||
1999 | Nilan PM, 'Book - Davis, Mark (1997) Gangland, Reviewed for Journal of Sociology 1999', Journal of Sociology, vol. 35, no. 1, 92-93 (1999) [C3] | ||||||||||
1998 |
Nilan P, 'Australian families: A comparative perspective', JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY, 34 71-72 (1998)
|
||||||||||
1998 | Nilan P, 'The company she keeps: An ethnography of girls' friendship', BRITISH JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY OF EDUCATION, 19 135-137 (1998) | ||||||||||
1998 | Nilan PM, Arianu G, 'Women's Status in Marital Law within the Balinese Sociocultural Context', Journal of Interdisciplinary Gender Studies, 3, 1 59-74 (1998) [C1] | ||||||||||
Show 82 more journal articles |
Conference (19 outputs)
Year | Citation | Altmetrics | Link | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2015 |
Alam M, Nilan, 'Urban Growth, Youth and Environmentalism driving Local Initiatives in Bandung,Indonesia', The Annual Conference of The Australian Sociological Association: Neoliberalism and Contemporary Challenges for the Asia-Pacific, Cairns (2015) [E1]
|
Nova | |||
2012 |
Nilan PM, Threadgold SR, 'The moral economy of the mosh pit: Straight edge, reflexivity and classification struggles', Youth Cultures & Subcultures: Australian Perspectives Symposium, Brisbane (2012) [E3]
|
||||
2012 | Nilan PM, 'Bourdieu and the global south: Studies of youth in non-western contexts', Youth Cultures, Transitions, Belongings: Bridging the Gap in Youth Research, Brisbane (2012) [E3] | ||||
2012 | Nilan PM, 'Local and global identities in urban Indonesian youth gangs', Youth Cultures, Transitions, Belongings: Bridging the Gap in Youth Research, Brisbane (2012) [E3] | ||||
2011 |
Nilan PM, Threadgold SR, 'Cruising into adulthood: Theorising young Indonesians and tourist liner service work', Australian Sociological Association (TASA) Conference: Local Lives/Global Networks, Newcastle, NSW (2011) [E3]
|
||||
2011 | Nilan PM, 'Intergenerational family relations and career choice of young people in Indonesia', The Second ISA Forum of Sociology: Social Justice & Democratization Book of Abstracts, Buenos Aires (2011) [E3] | ||||
2010 | Nilan PM, 'Young Muslim jobseekers in Australia', 2010 TASA Conference. List of Abstracts, Sydney, NSW (2010) [E3] | ||||
2009 | Nilan PM, 'Javanese youth and the influence of Islam on everyday life', 9th Conference of the Asia-Pacific Sociological Association (APSA), Bali, Indonesia (2009) [E3] | ||||
2009 | Nilan PM, Broom A, Demartoto A, Doron A, Nayar KR, Germov JB, 'Masculinities and violence in Indonesia and India', 9th Conference of the Asia-Pacific Sociological Association (APSA), Bali, Indonesia (2009) [E3] | ||||
2009 | Nilan PM, 'Nongkrong di Mall: Muslim youth interaction in Solo', Growing Up in Indonesia: Experience and Diversity in Youth Transitions: Workshop, Canberra, ACT (2009) [E3] | ||||
2009 | Nilan PM, Parker L, Robinson K, Bennett L, 'Ambivalent adolescents in Indonesia: Social trends', Growing Up in Indonesia: Experience and Diversity in Youth Transitions: Workshop, Canberra, ACT (2009) [E3] | ||||
2008 |
Harris MA, Southgate EL, Bowe SJ, Nilan PM, 'The health and lifestyle of sex workers in a regional city on Australia', International Nursing Research Conference: Facing the Challenge of Health Care Systems in Transition. Abstracts, Jerusalem, Israel (2008) [E3]
|
||||
2008 | Nilan PM, 'Can we apply class analysis to Indonesian youth?', Re-imagining Sociology, Melbourne, VIC (2008) [E1] | Nova | |||
2007 | Nilan PM, 'Fijian female youth: School-to-work/career transitions', TASA & SAANZ Joint Conference Proceedings, Auckland (2007) [E1] | ||||
2006 | Nilan PM, 'Straight Edge as an Australian Youth Subculture', TASA 2006 Conference Proceedings, University of Western Australia & Murdoch Universi (2006) [E1] | Nova | |||
2004 |
Nilan PM, Threadgold SR, 'How do young people define the good life? Comparing data from Australia, Fiji and Indonesia', TASA 2004 Conference Proceedings, La Trobe University (2004) [E1]
|
||||
2003 | Nilan PM, Threadgold S, 'Using Bourdieu to Look at Young People and Politics', TASA 2003 Conference, University of New England (2003) [E4] | ||||
2001 | Nilan PM, Darab SK, ''Half the time I go to work feeling like I've already worked a full day':Time and Women's Unpaid Work', Proceedings of The Australian Sociological Association (TASA), The University of Sydney (2001) [E1] | ||||
Show 16 more conferences |
Report (1 outputs)
Year | Citation | Altmetrics | Link | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2011 |
Lovat TJ, Mitchell WF, Nilan PM, Hosseini Faradonbeh SA, Cook B, Samarayi I, Mansfield MM, 'Australian Muslim Jobseekers: Labour Market Experience, Job Readiness, and the Relative Effectiveness of Employment Support Services. A research report', Australia. Dept. of Immigration and Citizenship., 215 (2011) [R1]
|
Thesis / Dissertation (1 outputs)
Year | Citation | Altmetrics | Link | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2020 |
Mansfield M, On the streets: Youth street art in Yogyakarta as a contemporary assemblage, University of Newcastle (2020)
|
Grants and Funding
Summary
Number of grants | 25 |
---|---|
Total funding | $585,546 |
Click on a grant title below to expand the full details for that specific grant.
20201 grants / $12,353
Newcastle Youth Studies Network$12,353
Funding body: Faculty of Education and Arts, University of Newcastle
Funding body | Faculty of Education and Arts, University of Newcastle |
---|---|
Project Team | Dr David Farrugia (Lead), Prof Penny Burke, Dr Julia Cook, Dr Steven Threadgold and Prof Pam Nilan |
Scheme | Strategic Network and Pilot Project Grants Scheme |
Role | Investigator |
Funding Start | 2020 |
Funding Finish | 2020 |
GNo | |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | N |
20191 grants / $5,000
Journal of Youth Studies Conference 2019$5,000
Funding body: Faculty of Education and Arts, University of Newcastle
Funding body | Faculty of Education and Arts, University of Newcastle |
---|---|
Project Team | Dr Steven Threadgold (Lead), Dr David Farrugia, Professor Pam NIlan, Professor Anita Harris (Deakin University), Dr Brady Robards (Monash University), A/Professor Dan Woodman (University of Melbourne), Professor Rachel Brookes (University of Surrey, UK) |
Scheme | Strategic Network and Pilot Project Grants Scheme |
Role | Investigator |
Funding Start | 2019 |
Funding Finish | 2019 |
GNo | |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | N |
20152 grants / $22,176
Newcastle Youth Studies Group - Theoretical Innovations and Challenges in Youth Sociology: One day symposium$15,000
Funding body: University of Newcastle - Faculty of Education and Arts
Funding body | University of Newcastle - Faculty of Education and Arts |
---|---|
Project Team | Associate Professor Steven Threadgold, Professor Pamela Nilan, Doctor Julia Coffey, Doctor David Farrugia, Doctor Hedda Askland |
Scheme | Strategic Networks Grant |
Role | Investigator |
Funding Start | 2015 |
Funding Finish | 2015 |
GNo | G1500904 |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | Y |
2015 International Visitor from University of Glasgow, United Kingdom$7,176
Funding body: University of Newcastle
Funding body | University of Newcastle |
---|---|
Project Team | Professor Pamela Nilan, Professor Andy Furlong |
Scheme | International Research Visiting Fellowship |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 2015 |
Funding Finish | 2016 |
GNo | G1401296 |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | Y |
20141 grants / $15,000
Network for Youth Research Outside the Northern Metropole$15,000
Funding body: University of Newcastle - Faculty of Education and Arts
Funding body | University of Newcastle - Faculty of Education and Arts |
---|---|
Project Team | Professor Pamela Nilan, Associate Professor Steven Threadgold, Conjoint Professor Andy Furlong, Doctor David Farrugia, Doctor Julia Coffey, Doctor Hedda Askland, Doctor Lena Rodriguez |
Scheme | Strategic Networks Grant |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 2014 |
Funding Finish | 2014 |
GNo | G1400957 |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | Y |
20132 grants / $132,290
Fostering Pro-Environment Consciousness and Practice: Environmentalism, Environmentality and Environmental Education in Indonesia$105,290
Funding body: ARC (Australian Research Council)
Funding body | ARC (Australian Research Council) |
---|---|
Project Team | Professor Lynette Parker, Dr Gregory Acciaioli, Professor Pamela Nilan |
Scheme | Discovery Projects |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 2013 |
Funding Finish | 2015 |
GNo | G1300047 |
Type Of Funding | Aust Competitive - Commonwealth |
Category | 1CS |
UON | Y |
Central Contribution to Faculty Peer Review - FEA$27,000
Funding body: University of Newcastle
Funding body | University of Newcastle |
---|---|
Project Team | Professor Pamela Nilan |
Scheme | Internal Research Support |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 2013 |
Funding Finish | 2013 |
GNo | G1301327 |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | Y |
20121 grants / $16,000
FT13 Future Fellowship External Applicant Support - FEA$16,000
Funding body: University of Newcastle
Funding body | University of Newcastle |
---|---|
Project Team | Professor Pamela Nilan |
Scheme | Internal Research Support |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 2012 |
Funding Finish | 2012 |
GNo | G1201219 |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | Y |
20111 grants / $10,000
Violence, Gender and NGO Initiatives in Indonesia and Sri Lanka$10,000
Funding body: University of Newcastle
Funding body | University of Newcastle |
---|---|
Project Team | Professor Pamela Nilan, Professor Roger Markwick |
Scheme | Linkage Pilot Research Grant |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 2011 |
Funding Finish | 2011 |
GNo | G1101068 |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | Y |
20092 grants / $204,526
Masculinities and violence in Indonesia and India$116,526
Funding body: AusAID (Australian Agency for International Development)
Funding body | AusAID (Australian Agency for International Development) |
---|---|
Project Team | Professor Pamela Nilan, Professor John Germov, Dr Alexander Broom |
Scheme | AusAID Development Research Awards |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 2009 |
Funding Finish | 2010 |
GNo | G0189470 |
Type Of Funding | Aust Competitive - Commonwealth |
Category | 1CS |
UON | Y |
The Job Readiness of Muslim Jobseekers and the Relative Effectiveness of Employment Support Services in Australia$88,000
Funding body: Department of Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs
Funding body | Department of Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs |
---|---|
Project Team | Emeritus Professor Terry Lovat, Emeritus Professor Bill Mitchell, Professor Pamela Nilan, Doctor S. A. Hamed Hosseini Faradonbeh, Doctor Beth Cook, Doctor Ibtihal Samarayi |
Scheme | National Action Plan for funding |
Role | Investigator |
Funding Start | 2009 |
Funding Finish | 2009 |
GNo | G0190368 |
Type Of Funding | Other Public Sector - Commonwealth |
Category | 2OPC |
UON | Y |
20081 grants / $1,178
The Australian Sociological Association Conference, The University of Melbourne, 2/12/2008 - 5/12/2008$1,178
Funding body: University of Newcastle
Funding body | University of Newcastle |
---|---|
Project Team | Professor Pamela Nilan |
Scheme | Travel Grant |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 2008 |
Funding Finish | 2008 |
GNo | G0189581 |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | Y |
20062 grants / $71,132
Ambivalent Adolescents in Indonesia$68,732
Funding body: ARC (Australian Research Council)
Funding body | ARC (Australian Research Council) |
---|---|
Project Team | Professor Pamela Nilan |
Scheme | Discovery Projects |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 2006 |
Funding Finish | 2009 |
GNo | G0186150 |
Type Of Funding | Aust Competitive - Commonwealth |
Category | 1CS |
UON | Y |
XVI ISA (International Sociology Association)World Congress of Sociology, 23-29 July 2006$2,400
Funding body: University of Newcastle
Funding body | University of Newcastle |
---|---|
Project Team | Professor Pamela Nilan |
Scheme | Travel Grant |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 2006 |
Funding Finish | 2006 |
GNo | G0186461 |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | Y |
20051 grants / $5,500
The Impact of Popular Culture on Young People's Gender Roles and Identities in Fiji$5,500
Funding body: University of Newcastle
Funding body | University of Newcastle |
---|---|
Project Team | Professor Pamela Nilan |
Scheme | Project Grant |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 2005 |
Funding Finish | 2005 |
GNo | G0184719 |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | Y |
20041 grants / $1,370
The 6th Conference of the Asia-Pacific Sociological Association, 17-19 Septemeber 2004, Korea$1,370
Funding body: University of Newcastle
Funding body | University of Newcastle |
---|---|
Project Team | Professor Pamela Nilan |
Scheme | Travel Grant |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 2004 |
Funding Finish | 2004 |
GNo | G0184787 |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | Y |
20032 grants / $66,270
Barriers and facilitators for HCV prevention among sex workers in the Hunter region.$65,890
Funding body: NSW Ministry of Health
Funding body | NSW Ministry of Health |
---|---|
Project Team | Associate Professor Erica Southgate, Professor Pamela Nilan, Professor Amanda Baker, Doctor Margaret Harris |
Scheme | Non Government Organisation Grant Program |
Role | Investigator |
Funding Start | 2003 |
Funding Finish | 2003 |
GNo | G0183141 |
Type Of Funding | Other Public Sector - State |
Category | 2OPS |
UON | Y |
The Australian Sociological Association (TASA) Conference New Times, New Worlds, New Ideas: Sociology Today and Tomorrow 4 to 6/12/03$380
Funding body: University of Newcastle
Funding body | University of Newcastle |
---|---|
Project Team | Professor Pamela Nilan |
Scheme | Travel Grant |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 2003 |
Funding Finish | 2003 |
GNo | G0183711 |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | Y |
20022 grants / $5,579
Visit of Mr Asmaun Aziz, from 2 September 2002 to 8 November 2002$4,603
Funding body: University of Newcastle
Funding body | University of Newcastle |
---|---|
Project Team | Professor Pamela Nilan |
Scheme | Visitor Grant |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 2002 |
Funding Finish | 2002 |
GNo | G0181910 |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | Y |
XV World Congress of Sociology, Brisbane 7-13 July 2002$976
Funding body: University of Newcastle
Funding body | University of Newcastle |
---|---|
Project Team | Professor Pamela Nilan |
Scheme | Travel Grant |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 2002 |
Funding Finish | 2002 |
GNo | G0182029 |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | Y |
20002 grants / $10,660
Young People, Education, Politics and radical Change in North Bali - Stage 2$9,000
Funding body: University of Newcastle
Funding body | University of Newcastle |
---|---|
Project Team | Professor Pamela Nilan |
Scheme | Project Grant |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 2000 |
Funding Finish | 2000 |
GNo | G0178805 |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | Y |
annual Conference of the Asia Pacific Sociological Association.$1,660
Funding body: University of Newcastle
Funding body | University of Newcastle |
---|---|
Project Team | Professor Pamela Nilan |
Scheme | Travel Grant |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 2000 |
Funding Finish | 2000 |
GNo | G0180266 |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | Y |
19991 grants / $5,500
Young People, Education, Politics and Radical Change in North Bali.$5,500
Funding body: University of Newcastle
Funding body | University of Newcastle |
---|---|
Project Team | Professor Pamela Nilan |
Scheme | Project Grant |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 1999 |
Funding Finish | 1999 |
GNo | G0178131 |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | Y |
19981 grants / $670
International Conference on Vietnamese Studies and the Enhancement of International Cooperation, Vietnam, 15-17 July 1998$670
Funding body: University of Newcastle
Funding body | University of Newcastle |
---|---|
Project Team | Professor Pamela Nilan |
Scheme | Travel Grant |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 1998 |
Funding Finish | 1998 |
GNo | G0180370 |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | Y |
19961 grants / $342
Asia-Pacific Regional Conference of Sociology - Philippines - 28-31 May$342
Funding body: University of Newcastle
Funding body | University of Newcastle |
---|---|
Project Team | Professor Pamela Nilan |
Scheme | Travel Grant |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 1996 |
Funding Finish | 1996 |
GNo | G0176310 |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | Y |
Research Supervision
Number of supervisions
Current Supervision
Commenced | Level of Study | Research Title | Program | Supervisor Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2021 | PhD | Emerging Environmentalisms and Everyday Politics in Australia | PhD (Sociology & Anthropology), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle | Co-Supervisor |
2018 | PhD | Technologies of Power and Subjectivities of Care in NSW Aboriginal Cultural Heritage Management | PhD (Sociology & Anthropology), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle | Co-Supervisor |
Past Supervision
Year | Level of Study | Research Title | Program | Supervisor Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2022 | Masters | Amaq Muda: Becoming and Being a Young Father in a Rural North Lombok Village | M Philosophy (Sociol & Anthro), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle | Principal Supervisor |
2020 | PhD | Exploring Sexuality and Gender Diversity in Contemporary Australian Sex Education: A Transgender Perspective | PhD (Sociology & Anthropology), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle | Principal Supervisor |
2020 | PhD | Moral Panics and Intergenerational Conflict: The Past is a Foreign Country, They Do Things Differently There | PhD (Sociology & Anthropology), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle | Principal Supervisor |
2020 | PhD | On The Streets: Youth Street Art in Yogyakarta as a Contemporary Assemblage | PhD (Sociology & Anthropology), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle | Principal Supervisor |
2018 | PhD | Women in Punk Creating Queer Identity Spaces: Strategies of Resistance Revisited | PhD (Sociology & Anthropology), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle | Principal Supervisor |
2018 | PhD | When the City Forest is Ours: Urban Environmentalism and Youth in Bandung, Indonesia | PhD (Sociology & Anthropology), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle | Principal Supervisor |
2016 | PhD | Experiences of Men in Regional Australia who Retire Early: A Life Course Study | PhD (Sociology & Anthropology), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle | Co-Supervisor |
2016 | PhD | Young Indonesian Musicians: Making the Transition to Adulthood through Entrepreneurial Activities and Mobility | PhD (Sociology & Anthropology), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle | Principal Supervisor |
2013 | PhD | Experiences of the 1996-2006 Civil Conflict in Nepal: Narratives of Engagement of Tamangs (Indigenous People) and Buhan-Chhetris (Non-Indigenous People) | PhD (Sociology & Anthropology), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle | Principal Supervisor |
2012 | PhD | TVET in Fiji: Attitudes, Perceptions and Discourses | PhD (Education), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle | Principal Supervisor |
2011 | PhD | Cultural Rules and Patterning in Food Systems and Nutrition of the Orang Asli Temiar: The Indigenous People of Peninsular Malaysia | PhD (Sociology & Anthropology), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle | Co-Supervisor |
2010 | PhD | Competing Discourses of Female Empowerment for School-Age Girls: Michel Foucault's Analytics of Power as a Theoretical Framework | PhD (Sociology & Anthropology), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle | Principal Supervisor |
2009 | PhD | Back to the Future, for Better or Worse? Meanings of Marriage for Young Women in the Lower Hunter Region, Australia | PhD (Sociology & Anthropology), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle | Principal Supervisor |
2009 | PhD | Youth and Habitus at Three Australian Schools: Perceptions of Ambitions, Risks and the Future in Reflexive Modernity | PhD (Sociology & Anthropology), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle | Principal Supervisor |
2007 | Honours | Single Mothers | Sociology, University of Newcastle | Sole Supervisor |
2007 | PhD | The Complexity of Labour Market Inequalities: Gendered Subjectivity, Material Circumstances and Young Women's Aspirations | PhD (Sociology & Anthropology), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle | Sole Supervisor |
2006 | Honours | The Meanings of Leisure for Women who have Survived Domestic Violence | Tourism, University of Newcastle | Sole Supervisor |
2006 | Honours | Experiences of ESL Teachers in Thailand | Sociology, University of Newcastle | Sole Supervisor |
2005 | PhD | The Gap between Indonesian Media Training and the Profession: Factors Affecting Young Women in Communication Studies and Media Careers | PhD (Comm & Media Arts), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle | Principal Supervisor |
2005 | Honours | Bisexuality and Sex Education in New South Wales Schools | Sociology, University of Newcastle | Sole Supervisor |
2004 | PhD | All the comforts of home? A critical ethnography of residential aged care in New Zealand | PhD (Nursing), College of Health, Medicine and Wellbeing, The University of Newcastle | Co-Supervisor |
2003 | PhD | Women Workers and the Informal Economy | Sociology, University of Newcastle | Sole Supervisor |
2002 | Honours | Young People, Risk and Political Awareness | Sociology, University of Newcastle | Sole Supervisor |
2002 | Honours | Youth Subcultures in Two Goth Nighclubs | Sociology, University of Newcastle | Sole Supervisor |
2001 | Masters | Young People and Citizenship | Sociology, University of Newcastle | Co-Supervisor |
1999 | Honours | Why do Women Choose to Remain Childless? | Sociology, University of Newcastle | Sole Supervisor |
1999 | Honours | Young Women and Surfing in Newcastle | Sociology, University of Newcastle | Co-Supervisor |
1998 | Honours | Young Women and the Negotiation of Sexual Risk | Sociology, University of Newcastle | Sole Supervisor |
1998 | Honours | The Enabling Characteristics of Hospital-Based Specialist Nursing Education | Sociology, University of Newcastle | Sole Supervisor |
1997 | Honours | Women Managing their Households | Sociology, University of Newcastle | Sole Supervisor |
News
News • 24 Aug 2016
FEDUA's Centre for Social Research and Regional Futures wins tender
A research team drawn from three Faculties and four Schools and led by FEDUA’s Centre for Social Research and Regional Futures (CSRRF) successfully tendered for a position on the Australian Government Department of Employment’s panel for research and evaluation services.
News • 20 Feb 2015
ERA Research Evaluation Committees 2015
Nine University of Newcastle researchers have been selected by the Australian Research Council for membership of the 2015 Excellence in Research for Australia (ERA) Research Evaluation Committees.
Professor Pamela Nilan
Position
Conjoint Professor
School of Humanities, Creative Ind and Social Sci
College of Human and Social Futures
Focus area
Sociology and Anthropology
Contact Details
pamela.nilan@newcastle.edu.au | |
Phone | (02) 4921 5912 |
Fax | (02) 4921 8822 |
Office
Room | W323 |
---|---|
Building | Behavioural Sciences |
Location | Callaghan University Drive Callaghan, NSW 2308 Australia |