Dr Hedda Askland
Associate Professor
School of Humanities, Creative Ind and Social Sci (Sociology and Anthropology)
- Email:hedda.askland@newcastle.edu.au
- Phone:(02) 4921 7067
Hedda Askland is shining a light on displaced communities in our own backyards
With stories of war and the impacts of global warming inundating our news, we are overwhelmed with media imagery of displaced communities in developing countries – their homes shattered and futures unclear. But what about displaced communities in developed countries like Australia?
Dr Hedda Askland, an anthropologist and member of the University of Newcastle’s Centre for Social Research and Regional Futures (CSRRF), examines the deep-rooted forces behind home, identity and belonging amongst people experiencing significant social, political and environmental change. Through her research with exile and refugee communities, as well as communities exposed to large-scale development projects, she has found we don’t have to look past our own backyards to find people suffering experiences of displacement.
“In contrast to my previous work with East Timorese living in Australia during a time of political upheaval, I currently work with local, long-established communities in Australia that co-exist with large scale industry. This project looks at people we don’t normally think of as refugees or migrants because they don’t travel across borders – some of them don’t even leave their house,” Askland said.
“…this project is looking at people we don’t normally think of as refugees or migrants because they don’t travel across borders – some of them don’t even leave their house”
Askland is currently conducting an ethnographic study in the Upper Hunter and Mid-Western regions, in which she explores people’s connection to place, their lived experiences of environmental and social change in the context of development, and the possibilities of environmentally-induced relief through movement and migration. At the moment she is working on a case study in the village of Wollar – a historic village on the edge of the Great Dividing Range that is surrounded by three open-cut coalmines.
Prior to the mining boom, Wollar was a community of about 400 people. There was a shop that sold everything from food to farming supplies, two churches, a local bushfire brigade, a mechanic, a nursery and a school. Today, only about 10 percent of the population remain, the nursery is relocating, there are only eight children left in the school and the shop is owned by mining company Peabody Energy – selling only expensive essentials. The closest town, Mudgee, is 50km away and Askland estimates the average age of residents is approximately 60 years old.
“When I speak with people in Wollar, they exhibit a real sense of distress that is connected to the future, especially in relation to the planned expansion of the mine, which will move the mine boundary to only 1.5km from the village,” Askland said.
“This is when I realised we needed to expand the current concepts we have for explaining displacement to something that is about people’s lived experiences and incorporates their imagined futures.”
As a result Askland is developing a concept she has termed ‘eritalgia’, which will assist in better understanding the role the future plays in the lived experiences of social and environmental change.
“The concept adds to the existing concepts ‘nostalgia’, which describes people’s connection to place in the past, and ‘solastalgia’, a term developed by Professor Glenn Albrecht to describe place-based melancholia, trauma or distress in the present. In contrast to these concepts, ‘eritalgia’ points to the embodied sense of displacement that may occur when there is a rupture between lived realities and imagined emplaced self,” Askland explains.
“I believe our understanding of place-based stress and relief must be expanded to incorporate people’s imagined futures, and that by creating a triadic concept such as this we can better understand displacement as an existential condition of loss, as it manifests in relation to the past, the present and the future”.
“By unpacking displacement in the context of what is happening in regional New South Wales, I will challenge conventional ways of understanding and speaking about displacement and relocation. Looking at the loss of community, questions of social cohesion, and individual sense of self as it is happening in Wollar, I am able to explore the question of home as it relates to place and mobility,” Askland explains.
“Not home as a physical place but home as a space in which our sense of self, physical landscape and social landscape are in harmony.”
“When this is aligned, people articulate a sense of home. This project will expand how we understand emplaced and existential loss, and connect it to both spatial and temporal dimensions. It will create an evidence base and theoretical framework for showing the significance of this issue, add to our understanding of the impacts development projects may have on communities and individuals, and show how mobility and migration might both cause and relieve environmentally-induced stress.”
“I hope that through this research I am able to initiate a public debate and awareness about how displacement as an experiential condition is not restricted to refugees and other migrants, but in fact can occur in our own backyard.”
Hedda Askland is shining a light on displaced communities in our own backyards
Dr Hedda Haugen Askland examines the deep-rooted forces behind home, identity and belonging in exile and refugee communities
Career Summary
Biography
I am a Norwegian social anthropologist whose research centres on the questions of displacement and rupture in the context of significant socio-political and environmental change. My early scholarly work focussed on the experience of exile and identity within the East Timorese diaspora in Australia, with a particular consideration of how conflict ‘at home’ shapes everyday diasporic practice and translocal engagements. In my early post-doctoral years, I applied my anthropological knowledge and skills to the interdisciplinary field of architecture, design and construction management. Through this work, I became increasingly interested in the anthropological dimensions of built and natural environment, the implications of large-scale infrastructure and development on smaller (particularly rural) communities, and the forms of invisible displacement that occur in the name of progress and development.
My chief scholarly contributions have been in the areas of displacement and the anthropology of mining. My current ethnographic research focuses on mining-affected communities in rural New South Wales, Australia. I have been conducting fieldwork there since 2015, observing how local communities endure rapid change because of mining operations. My research investigates the encounter between the multinational mining industry and small, local communities. It engages with the theoretical topics of temporality and materiality, class and inequality, proximity and reciprocity, and is placed in relation to the anthropological scholarship on mining and extraction, globalisation and accelerated change. My work presents a deep critique of the conventional emphasis on displacement as a linear process from hardship to refuge initiated by involuntary movement across geographical boundaries and socioeconomic realities. Rather, I conceptualise displacement as a condition of having the teleology of life disrupted, arguing for the idea of ‘displacement in place’ by which a sense of displacement may emerge because of changes to place as a biophysical, social and ontological entity.
My work on displacement expands the empirical field of mining affected communities and I have advanced this scholarship into the broader field of energy transition, environmental change and, specifically, climate change. My more recent research interest focus on these themes specifically as it relates to (post-)industrial landscapes, a topic that I am about to start investigating at depth through a new project funded by the Australian Research Council on mining voids and the social and affective dimensions of post-mining landscapes.
I am committed to producing scholarship that has application to the public. My work has informed policy and planning while also raising awareness about the injustice that takes place in the name of economic progress, development and public good. I regularly offer advice on social impacts and work closely with local communities in responses to development applications. Central to my work is a commitment to support anthropological efforts that respond to the urgent demands of living in the Anthropocene. I am particularly interested in amplifying applied scholarship that makes a difference in the communities in which anthropologists and social scientists work, and my research program has seen me work with rural communities across New South Wales, various government departments, NGOs and local organisations. Based on my expertise in the area, I have given expert statements on different extractive project applications under consideration by the Minister of Planning. I was an expert witness on social impact in the Rocky Hill court case in the Land and Environment Court, which resulted in the unprecedented rejection of the mine proposal on the grounds of social impact and climate change.
Teaching Expertise
I teach at both undergraduate and post graduate levels, and my teaching includes both traditional (face-to-face) and online modes.
Some of the courses that I teach or contribute to include:
SOCA1020: What is Anthropology?
HASS1000: BA Futures
HASS2000: BA Practice
SOCA3850: Rage Against the Machine: Indigenous, Activism, Ways of Life and the Future (frm: Indigenous People in the Contemporary World)
SCHS4090: Societies, Cultures and Human Services Honours I
SCHS4100: Societies, Cultures and Human Services Honours II
SOCA6571: Development and Social Change
Collaborations
As part of my research, I have worked in a number of interdisciplinary research teams with members from a number of faculties and universities (including: RMIT University, Deakin University, the University of Tasmania, Monash University, Queensland University of Technology and Melbourne University). I have worked as part of multi-disciplinary teams based at The University of Newcastle, which included the disciplines of anthropology, Indigenous studies, architecture, construction management, architectural history and design, law, human geography, public health, electrical engineering and computing, transitioning studies and engineering. I aspire to bring my disciplinary expertise as an ethnographer and social anthropologist into interdisciplinary teams and to use the interdisciplinary nature of this research as a foundation to expand knowledge by exploring new terrains and methodologies.
Qualifications
- Doctor of Philosophy, University of Newcastle
- Master of Social Science, University of Newcastle
Keywords
- Anthropology
- Climate change
- Displacement
- Energy
- Environmental change
- Ethnography
- Home
- Identity
- Land use
- Mining
- Place
- Rural
- Social change
- Transition
Languages
- Norwegian (Fluent)
Fields of Research
Code | Description | Percentage |
---|---|---|
440107 | Social and cultural anthropology | 60 |
440104 | Environmental anthropology | 40 |
Professional Experience
UON Appointment
Title | Organisation / Department |
---|---|
Associate Professor | University of Newcastle School of Humanities, Creative Ind and Social Sci Australia |
Membership
Dates | Title | Organisation / Department |
---|---|---|
1/1/2014 - | Membership - Sydney Southeast Asia Centre | Sydney Southeast Asia Centre Australia |
1/1/2010 - 31/12/2011 | Membership - European Association of Social Anthropologists (EASA) | European Association of Social Anthropologists (EASA) United Kingdom |
1/1/2005 - | Membership - Australian Anthropological Society (AAS) | Australian Anthropological Society (AAS) Australia |
Awards
Research Award
Year | Award |
---|---|
2016 |
Vice Chancellor's Early Career Research and Innovation Excellence Award (Individual Award, FEDUA) Faculty of Education and Arts, The University of Newcastle, Australia |
Teaching
Code | Course | Role | Duration |
---|---|---|---|
SCHS4100 |
Societies, Cultures and Human Services Honours II The University of Newcastle This course is the second of two Honours level courses which build knowledge and understanding about the history and philosophy of research in Sociology and Anthropology. This knowledge and understanding is used to develop insights into the ways that problems in Sociology and Anthropology are conceived and acted on. The course enhances skills and capacities in reading and literature reviewing, critical reasoning and argument, essay writing and verbal communication. The course includes: discussions of pure and applied research methods in Sociology and Anthropology; ethical and research design issues; student-based presentations of key issues and research proposals; and on-line bibliographic searches and writing techniques. |
SCHS4100 | 13/5/2019 - 13/6/2019 |
SOCA6571 |
Development and Social Change University of Newcastle - Faculty of Education and Arts This course aims to provide students with the concepts and analytical skills to understand the rapid changes that are taking place in developing countries. The course examines globalisation and economic development in relation to states and specific social and cultural groups, as well as forces of internal change including gender, ethnicity and social movements. The course will focus on governmental as well as non-governmental actors on local, national and international levels. |
Course Coordinator and Lecturer | 5/1/2015 - 13/5/2019 |
SCHS4090 |
Societies, Cultures and Human Services Honours I NEWCASTLE UNIVERSITY This course introduces students to key debates and perspectives on theory and methods in the social sciences, more specifically sociology and anthropology, human services and criminology. Through interdisciplinary enquiry, the students will explore the questions of 'what is knowledge?' and 'how do we know what we know?'. The core concept of the course is 'epistemology' and a central learning objective is for the students to gain insight into how epistemology features in their own research. Through this course, students will gain an understanding of how research problems are conceived and acted upon in the disciplines of anthropology and sociology, human services and criminology. They will explore the philosophical underpinnings of social research, as well as ethical and political components of research. |
Course Coordinator and Seminar Leader | 20/2/2018 - 13/6/2019 |
SOCA1020 |
Introduction to Social and Cultural Anthropology University of Newcastle - Faculty of Education and Arts This course introduces students to the history of anthropology and anthropological thought; the nature of anthropological fieldwork, and theoretical, empirical, and methodological debates within the discipline. The course examines how the study of other cultures and societies can help us deal with urgent problems confronting the contemporary world. |
Course Coordinator and Lecturer | 2/6/2014 - 14/11/2015 |
SOCA3850 |
Indigenous Peoples and the Contemporary World University of Newcastle - Faculty of Education and Arts Explores the contemporary socio-cultural, economic and political situation of indigenous peoples in the contemporary world. This course is divided into two complementary sections. Section 1 looks at definitions and parameters of 'indigenous' peoples and their overlap with 'ethnic minorities' and the concept of 'fourth world nations'. Section 2 describes the different types of indigenous peoples' struggles, for example struggles over land/marine rights, co-existence with settler/migrant communities, independence and nationhood, and reclamation of pre-colonial political boundaries and entities. The course will place distinct emphasis how contemporary challenges facing indigenous people relate to questions of land and land use, with exploration of post-colonial and de-colonial theory, through examples of contemporary land use struggles (e.g. Standing Rock). |
Course Coordinator and Lecturer | 2/6/2014 - 13/5/2019 |
Publications
For publications that are currently unpublished or in-press, details are shown in italics.
Book (2 outputs)
Year | Citation | Altmetrics | Link |
---|---|---|---|
2012 | Askland HH, Ostwald M, Williams AP, Assessing Creativity: Supporting Learning in Architecture and Design, Australian Government Office for Learning and Teaching, Sydney, 355 (2012) [A3] | ||
2010 | Williams AP, Ostwald M, Askland HH, Creativity, Design and Education: Theories, Positions and Challenges, Australian Learning & Teaching Council, Strawberry Hills, NSW, 199 (2010) [A2] |
Chapter (11 outputs)
Year | Citation | Altmetrics | Link | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2022 |
Duffy M, Boyd C, Barry K, Askland H, 'Collective emotions and resilient regional communities', The Palgrave Encyclopedia of Urban and Regional Futures, Springer Nature, Switzerland AG (2022)
|
||||||||||
2018 |
Askland HH, Bunn M, 'Extractive inequalities: Coal, land acquisition and class in rural New South Wales, Australia', Energy, Resource Extraction and Society: Impacts and Contested Futures 20-36 (2018) [B1] From the 1970s, state¿driven pursuits for coal and revenue have radically transformed rural landscapes and sociality in New South Wales, Australia. The region, which has a long hi... [more] From the 1970s, state¿driven pursuits for coal and revenue have radically transformed rural landscapes and sociality in New South Wales, Australia. The region, which has a long history of coal mining, moved from being run by locally based enterprises that contributed to the sustainability of local communities to large-scale, global corporations relying on a translocal workforce. As coal operations emerged from the underground, a radical restructuring of spatial relations took place. This restructuring was also underpinned by the privatisation of coal and power supplies, with transnational extraction corporations becoming landholders in agricultural regions. As the mining boom intensified, mining companies emerged as a major landholder in rural areas of New South Wales. Seeking to purchase strategic properties for exploration, extraction or mitigation, mining companies approached and negotiated with individual, local landholders. In this paper, we consider how this process have followed class¿based lines and how class exposes distinct vulnerabilities and privileges in a meeting with a miner. We contend that there is a vacuum in the planning process, which exposes vulnerable communities that have limited capacity to contest these developments and define the future and meaning of their place of belonging.
|
Nova | |||||||||
2018 |
Askland HH, Bunn M, 'Extractive inequalities: Coal, land acquisition and class in rural New South Wales, Australia', Energy, Resource Extraction and Society: Impacts and Contested Futures 20-36 (2018) [B1] From the 1970s, state¿driven pursuits for coal and revenue have radically transformed rural landscapes and sociality in New South Wales, Australia. The region, which has a long hi... [more] From the 1970s, state¿driven pursuits for coal and revenue have radically transformed rural landscapes and sociality in New South Wales, Australia. The region, which has a long history of coal mining, moved from being run by locally based enterprises that contributed to the sustainability of local communities to large-scale, global corporations relying on a translocal workforce. As coal operations emerged from the underground, a radical restructuring of spatial relations took place. This restructuring was also underpinned by the privatisation of coal and power supplies, with transnational extraction corporations becoming landholders in agricultural regions. As the mining boom intensified, mining companies emerged as a major landholder in rural areas of New South Wales. Seeking to purchase strategic properties for exploration, extraction or mitigation, mining companies approached and negotiated with individual, local landholders. In this paper, we consider how this process have followed class¿based lines and how class exposes distinct vulnerabilities and privileges in a meeting with a miner. We contend that there is a vacuum in the planning process, which exposes vulnerable communities that have limited capacity to contest these developments and define the future and meaning of their place of belonging.
|
Nova | |||||||||
2012 | Askland HH, Ostwald M, Williams AP, 'Assessing creativity: Revisiting the literature', Assessing Creativity: Supporting Learning in Architecture and Design, Australian Government Office for Learning and Teaching, Sydney 1-16 (2012) [B1] | Nova | |||||||||
2012 | Askland HH, Williams AP, 'The challenge of teaching creativity', Assessing Creativity: Supporting Learning in Architecture and Design, Australian Government Office for Learning and Teaching, Sydney 29-46 (2012) [B1] | Nova | |||||||||
2012 | Askland HH, Ostwald M, 'Assessing creativity: Academic and student perceptions', Assessing Creativity: Supporting Learning in Architecture and Design, Australian Government Office for Learning and Teaching, Sydney 47-62 (2012) [B1] | Nova | |||||||||
2012 | Ostwald M, Askland HH, 'Models and matrices', Assessing Creativity: Supporting Learning in Architecture and Design, Australian Government Office for Learning and Teaching, Sydney 63-80 (2012) [B1] | Nova | |||||||||
2012 | Ostwald M, Askland HH, 'Assessment regimes: Patterns of creative evaluation in architecture and design', Assessing Creativity: Supporting Learning in Architecture and Design, Australian Government Office for Learning and Teaching, Sydney 81-100 (2012) [B1] | Nova | |||||||||
2012 | Askland HH, 'Reflective journal review', Assessing Creativity: Supporting Learning in Architecture and Design, Australian Government Office for Learning and Teaching, Sydney 255-270 (2012) [B1] | Nova | |||||||||
2012 | Askland HH, Ostwald M, Williams AP, 'Overarching issues, strategic considerations and practical responses: Final thoughts on assessing design', Assessing Creativity: Supporting Learning in Architecture and Design, Australian Government Office for Learning and Teaching, Sydney 289-298 (2012) [B1] | Nova | |||||||||
2011 | Williams AP, Gu N, Askland HH, 'Virtuality - Offering opportunites for creativity', Design Creativity 2010, Springer, London 183-190 (2011) [B1] | Nova | |||||||||
Show 8 more chapters |
Journal article (27 outputs)
Year | Citation | Altmetrics | Link | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2024 |
Martínez Arranz A, Askland HH, Box Y, Scurr I, 'United in criticism: The discursive politics and coalitions of Australian energy debates on social media', Energy Research and Social Science, 108 (2024) [C1] This paper applies social network analysis (SNA) and natural language processing (NLP) tools within a traditional discourse analysis framework to better understand the polarisatio... [more] This paper applies social network analysis (SNA) and natural language processing (NLP) tools within a traditional discourse analysis framework to better understand the polarisation in the online debate around climate and energy issues. We draw on tweets over 2019¿2021 to characterise a large network of over 10,000 highly followed Twitter users that participate in the Australian climate and energy debate on this social media platform. Through community detection algorithms, we identify five ¿discourse coalitions¿. Drawing on quantitative analysis of hashtags and mentions, topic modelling of their tweets, and identifying the most central users, we characterise four as anti-coal and one as anti-renewables. The former focus on current affairs, grassroots activism, science and technology, and Green politics, while the latter is made up by conservative commentators, including climate change deniers, who emphasise coal as a valuable commodity. A bipolar distribution of opinions is thus easy to discern, but the widespread picture of ¿echo chambers¿ seems inaccurate, since there is significant exchange and interconnection between opposing poles. Another distinct finding is that the debate, albeit civil compared to results from other studies, is focused on criticism and outrage. Those opposed to renewables talked more about wind power than those pro-renewables, and coal opponents spoke mostly about coal. Technological choices with ambiguous positioning, e.g., carbon capture and storage, were ignored across all coalitions. Giving neutral or positive themes greater circulation appears desirable but may require much more interventionism than Twitter and other social media are prepared to undertake.
|
Nova | |||||||||
2024 |
Askland H, 'Lost Futures', Science & Technology Studies,
|
||||||||||
2022 |
Askland HH, Shannon B, Chiong R, Lockart N, Maguire A, Rich J, Groizard J, 'Beyond migration: a critical review of climate change induced displacement', Environmental Sociology, 8 267-278 (2022) [C1] Scholarship on displacement caused by the effects of climate change generally approaches displacement as the involuntary movement of people. However, in this article, we argue tha... [more] Scholarship on displacement caused by the effects of climate change generally approaches displacement as the involuntary movement of people. However, in this article, we argue that there are uncertainties surrounding Climate Change Induced Displacement (CCID) that are partly caused by discursive ambiguity around the notion of ¿displacement¿¿a concept that remains poorly defined in the context of climate change research¿and a conflation between displacement due to quick-onset disaster events and the cumulative pressure of living in an environment marked by a disrupted climate. Reflecting on the impacts of the Australian bushfires in 2019¿20, we conceptualise CCID beyond migration as an event and a physical relocation across geographical space. Even fast-onset disaster events, such as the Australian bushfires, can dispossess and displace beyond the immediate threat of the fire front; but this displacement is not necessarily aligned with movement and migration, nor is it evenly proportioned across populations. Based on a review of existing literature on CCID, we identify three key tensions shaping scholarship on CCID: conceptualisation; distribution of risk and impact; and discursive framing. Together, we contend, these tensions highlight the imperative of striving for conceptual clarity and awareness of distributional inequities of risk and vulnerabilities.
|
Nova | |||||||||
2022 |
Ramsay G, Askland HH, 'Displacement as Condition: A Refugee, a Farmer and the Teleology of Life', Ethnos, 87 600-621 (2022) [C1] The focus on migration ¿crisis¿ in recent years has reinforced tropes of displacement as a concept that refers to involuntary movement, foreclosing the possibility of thinking thr... [more] The focus on migration ¿crisis¿ in recent years has reinforced tropes of displacement as a concept that refers to involuntary movement, foreclosing the possibility of thinking through displacement in relation to the politicisation of place more broadly. Here, we take up two radically different case studies¿a farmer and a refugee¿to ask whether it is possible to speak of displacement beyond assumptions of involuntary mobility, and what theoretical insights doing so might reveal. By bringing attention to these cases, we show commonalities of displacement experiences that have little to do with involuntary movement but are, instead, intertwined in existential processes of having the teleology of life, and the sense of connection to place, disrupted by external forces of dispossession. We argue that, if anthropologists are to understand displacement as a condition, we need to focus on lived experiences of conflict between self, place, and contemporary modes of dispossession.
|
Nova | |||||||||
2021 |
Senior K, Askland HH, Groizard J, ' A dog called Neville : using dog names to explore theory and method in anthropology', Practicing Anthropology, 43 8-13 (2021) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2020 |
Askland HH, 'Mining voids: Extraction and emotion at the Australian coal frontier', Polar Record, 56 1-1o (2020) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2020 |
Lockart N, Kiem AS, Chiong R, Askland HH, Maguire A, Rich JL, 'Projected change in meteorological drought characteristics using regional climate model data for the Hunter region of Australia', Climate Research, 80 85-104 (2020) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2019 |
Farrugia D, Hanley JE, Sherval M, Askland HH, Askew MG, Coffey JE, Threadgold SR, 'The local politics of rural land use: Place, extraction industries and narratives of contemporary rurality', JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY, 55 306-322 (2019) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2018 |
Askland HH, 'A dying village: Mining and the experiential condition of displacement', EXTRACTIVE INDUSTRIES AND SOCIETY-AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL, 5 230-236 (2018) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2018 |
Sherval M, Askland H, Askew M, Hanley J, Farrugia D, Threadgold SR, Coffey J, 'Farmers as modern-day stewards and the rise of new rural citizenship in the battle over land use', Local Environment: the international journal of justice and sustainability, 23 100-116 (2018) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2018 |
Threadgold SR, Farrugia D, Askland H, Askew M, Hanley J, Sherval M, Coffey J, 'Affect, risk and local politics of knowledge: changing land use in Narrabri, NSW', Environmental Sociology, 4 393-404 (2018) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2018 |
Austin EK, Handley T, Kiem AS, Rich JL, Lewin TJ, Askland HH, et al., 'Drought-related stress among farmers: findings from the Australian Rural Mental Health Study.', The Medical journal of Australia, 209 159-165 (2018) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2018 |
Askland HH, Bunn M, 'Lived experiences of environmental change: Solastalgia, power and place', Emotion, Space and Society, 27 16-22 (2018) [C1] The concept of solastagia has been developed by environmental philosopher Albrecht to understand the psychological trauma, also referred to as place-based distress, experienced be... [more] The concept of solastagia has been developed by environmental philosopher Albrecht to understand the psychological trauma, also referred to as place-based distress, experienced because of environmental change. In this article, we explore ways to further this concept. The article draws on ethnographic fieldwork in a village in the mid-western region of New South Wales (NSW), Australia, which is surrounded by three large open-cut coal mines. Over the past decade, the mines, in particular the Peabody-owned Wilpinjong mine closest to the village, have had a significant impact on biophysical, social and temporal landscapes in the area. We argue that whilst solastalgia may help explore the relationship between the environmental and human distress triggered in these circumstances, the sense of displacement and loss that emerge are entangled with questions of power and dispossession beyond the biophysical realm. Underpinned by a phenomenological framework of analysis, we contend that place-based distress should be understood as an ontological trauma, as the fabrics of place, belonging and the social relations embedded within disrupt the ongoing sense of being associated with home. These include the means to not only link to the past, but also to imagine the future.
|
Nova | |||||||||
2018 |
Coffey J, Threadgold SR, Farrugia D, Sherval M, Hanley J, Askew M, Askland H, ' If you lose your youth, you lose your heart and your future : Affective figures of youth in community tensions surrounding a proposed Coal Seam Gas project', Sociologica Ruralis, 58 665-683 (2018) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2016 |
Chapman M, Askland HH, Chambers J, Awad R, 'Architecture and ethnography: reflections on the structure and organisation of architectural practice', The International Journal of Design Management and Professional Practice, 10 (2016) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2015 |
Askland HH, ''It was all about independence': loss, division and rejuvenation amongst the East Timorese in Melbourne (vol 25, pg 321, 2014)', AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF ANTHROPOLOGY, 26 143-143 (2015)
|
||||||||||
2015 |
Askland HH, 'East Timorese in Australia: Affective Relations, Identity, and Belonging in a Time of Political Crisis', ASEAS : Österreichische Zeitschrift für Südostasienwissenschaften, 7 199-216 (2015) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2014 |
Askland HH, 'Circulating Stories:
|
Nova | |||||||||
2014 |
Askland HH, ''It was all about independence': loss, division and rejuvenation amongst the East Timorese in Melbourne', AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF ANTHROPOLOGY, 25 321-336 (2014) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2014 |
MacKee J, Askland HH, Askew L, 'Recovering cultural built heritage after natural disasters: A resilience perspective', International Journal of Disaster Resilience in the Built Environment, 5 202-212 (2014) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2014 |
Askland HH, Awad R, Chambers J, Chapman M, 'Anthropological quests in architecture: Pursuing the human subject', Archnet-IJAR: International Journal of Architectural Research, 8 284-295 (2014) [C1] In this paper, we explore what architectural practice and, more specifically, the architectural research domain, may gain from the theoretical and methodological premise of anthro... [more] In this paper, we explore what architectural practice and, more specifically, the architectural research domain, may gain from the theoretical and methodological premise of anthropology and ethnography. The paper explores a historical link between anthropology and architecture as academic disciplines, arguing that the disciplines are aligned through anthropology's search for understanding the conditions of humanity and architecture's role in forming these very conditions. We do not intend to explicate the individual disciplines but are interested in the crossover between the two and, more specifically, what insights anthropology and ethnography may offer to the discipline of architecture. We consider the relationship between anthropology and architecture, as both a research domain and a profession, and question how anthropology-as an approach to research more so than a discipline-can contribute to the advancement of architectural practice and research.
|
Nova | |||||||||
2013 |
Askland HH, 'My Life as a Chameleon: Finding the Anthropological Self through Interdisciplinary Collaboration', Collaborative Anthropologies, 6 244-267 (2013) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2013 |
Askland HH, Gajendran T, Brewer G, 'Project organizations as organizational fields: expanding the level of analysis through Pierre Bourdieu's Theory of Practice', Engineering Project Organization Journal, 3 116-126 (2013) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2011 |
Williams AP, Ostwald M, Askland HH, 'The relationship between creativity and design and its implication for design education', Design Principles and Practices: An International Journal, 5 57-72 (2011) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
2007 |
Askland HH, 'Habitus, practice and agency of young East Timorese asylum seekers in Australia', Asia Pacific Journal of Anthropology, 8 235-249 (2007) [C1]
|
Nova | |||||||||
Show 24 more journal articles |
Conference (28 outputs)
Year | Citation | Altmetrics | Link | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2023 |
Sherval M, Askland HH, 'The ongoing Legacy of mine voids A New South Wales Hunter Valley perspective', No, Curtin University, Perth, Western Australia. (2023)
|
||||
2023 |
Askland H, Sherval M, 'A Roadmap for Restoration: Re-imagining the Future in the Hunter Valley, Australia', Ljubliana, Slovenia (2023)
|
||||
2023 |
Askland H, Sherval M, Clifton E, 'Filling the void: imagining post-mining landscapes in the Hunter Valley', University College Dublin (2023)
|
||||
2016 |
Foulcher NC, Askland HH, Gu N, 'Disruptions: Impact of digital design technologies on continuity in established design process paradigms', CAADRIA 2016, 21st International Conference on Computer-Aided Architectural Design Research in Asia - Living Systems and Micro-Utopias: Towards Continuous Designing (2016) [E1] This paper aims to provide a critical understanding of the discipline of architectural education, exploring how digital technology forms part of two Australian architecture school... [more] This paper aims to provide a critical understanding of the discipline of architectural education, exploring how digital technology forms part of two Australian architecture schools. Generally accepted as the unbroken and consistent existence or operation of something over a period of time, continuity represents stability without interruption. In the context of architectural design education, continuity aligns almost symbiotically with the design process; a system that facilitates a continuous loop of input, output and feedback for the designer- from defining the brief, collecting information, synthesising and presenting a design proposal. Preliminary findings of a larger research study that investigates the role of technology in architecture education, suggest that cultural patterns of technology adoption and valuation exist, valorising particular tools and establishing a framework for design teaching and practice that might disrupt the continuity of students' design process. Moreover, the study shows evidence of a disruption of continuity in design school narratives, emphasising the need to rethink design pedagogy and the place of technology herein. Reflecting on these observations, this paper explores the question: When the tools of digital technology challenge the established design process paradigm of an architectural school, how do educators respond to such a disruption in continuity?.
|
Nova | |||
2015 | Askland HH, 'Mining and displacement: introducing the concept of 'eritalgia'', Melbourne (2015) [E3] | ||||
2014 |
Foulcher NC, Gu N, Askland HH, 'The perceived effect of digital design technology on student learning in architectural technology', Across: Architectural Research through to Practice: 48th International Conference of the Architectural Science Association, Genova (2014) [E1]
|
Nova | |||
2012 |
Askland HH, Gajendran T, Brewer GJ, 'Project organisations as organisational fields: An exploration of construction projects through Pierre Bourdieu's Theory of Practice', Working Paper Proceedings. Engineering Project Organizations Conference, Rheden, The Netherlands (2012) [E1]
|
Nova | |||
2012 | Mackee J, Askland HH, Askew L, 'Maintaining place: Resilience as a means of protecting cultural built heritage in the face of natural disasters, a theoretical overview', RICS COBRA 2012, Las Vegas, Nevada (2012) [E1] | Nova | |||
2012 |
Jones WM, Askland HH, 'Design briefs: Is there a standard', Proceedings of the 14th International Conference on Engineering & Product Design Education, Antwerp, Belgium (2012) [E1]
|
Nova | |||
2012 |
Gajendran T, Askland HH, Dainty A, Brewer GJ, 'Cognitive interests, epistemological space and aspirational identity: How does identity form part of construction?', Conference Proceedings Joint CIB International Symposium of W055, WO65, WO89, W118, TG76, TG78, TG81 and TG84: International Congress on Construction Management Research, Montreal, Canada (2012) [E1]
|
Nova | |||
2011 | Ostwald M, Askland HH, Williams AP, 'Assessing creativity as an aspired learning outcome: A four-part model', Conference Proceedings 45th Annual Conference of the Australian and New Zealand Architectural Science Association, Sydney, NSW (2011) [E1] | Nova | |||
2011 |
Askland HH, Williams AP, Ostwald M, 'Teaching creative design: A challenging field', Proceedings of the Desire'11 Conference: Creativity and Innovation in Design, Eindhoven, The Netherlands (2011) [E1]
|
Nova | |||
2011 | Askland HH, Williams AP, Ostwald M, 'Finding common ground: A disciplinary approach to creativity', Proceedings of the 13th International Conference on Engineering and Product Design Education (EPDE2011), London (2011) [E1] | Nova | |||
2011 |
Askland HH, Ostwald M, Williams AP, 'Assessing creativity: Proposition', Proceedings of the 13th International Conference on Engineering and Product Design Education (EPDE2011), London (2011) [E1]
|
Nova | |||
2011 | Williams AP, Ostwald M, Askland HH, 'In search for unity: Finding a disciplinary approach to design creativity', Proceedings of IASDR2011, 4th World Conference on Design Research, Delft, The Netherlands (2011) [E1] | Nova | |||
2010 | Askland HH, Ostwald M, Williams AP, 'Changing conceptualisations of creativity in design', Proceedings of the DESIRE'10 Conference: Creativity and Innovation in Design, Aarhus, Denmark (2010) [E1] | Nova | |||
2010 | Williams AP, Ostwald M, Askland HH, 'The design studio, models of creativity and the education of future designers', Proceedings of the DESIRE'10 Conference: Creativity and Innovation in Design, Aarhus, Denmark (2010) [E1] | Nova | |||
2010 | Williams AP, Ostwald M, Askland HH, 'Assessing creativity in the context of architectural design education', Conference Proceedings. Design & Complexity: Design Research Society International Conference, Montreal (2010) [E1] | Nova | |||
2010 | Askland HH, 'Fighting for the homeland: East-Timorese refugees and the reproduction of locality in exile', Crisis and Imagination. EASA 11th Biennial Conference. Conference Programme and book of abstracts, Maynooth, Ireland (2010) [E3] | ||||
2010 | Askland HH, Ostwald M, Williams AP, 'Creativity and design: An educational dilemma', On the Edge. Conference Papers of the 44th Annual Conference of ANZAScA, Auckland, NZ (2010) [E1] | Nova | |||
2010 | Williams AP, Askland HH, Ostwald M, 'Changes in students' attitudes toward architectural education', All Ireland Symposium on Built Environment Education. Abstracts and Papers, University of Ulster, Ireland (2010) [E1] | Nova | |||
2010 | Askland HH, Williams AP, Ostwald M, 'From ambiguity to complexity: Conceptualising creativity in the context of formal design education', Conference Proceedings: The First International Conference on Design Creativity (IDC2010), Kobe, Japan (2010) [E1] | Nova | |||
Show 25 more conferences |
Media (2 outputs)
Year | Citation | Altmetrics | Link |
---|---|---|---|
2016 | Askland HH, 'Communities in mining's shadow now a 'living hell'', (2016) | ||
2016 | Askland HH, 'What price can be placed on our future', (2016) |
Other (8 outputs)
Year | Citation | Altmetrics | Link | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2019 | Askland H, 'Place matters: Rocky Hill and social impact', Place matters: Rocky Hill and social impact: The Newcastle Herald (2019) | ||||
2017 |
Maguire AM, Askland H, 'Protesters fight invisible displacement by mine', : The Conversation (2017)
|
||||
2013 | Askland HH, Awad R, Chapman M, Johnson L, Nield L, 'Structures of architectural practice: an ethnographic study of architectural practice in Sydney', (2013) | ||||
Show 5 more others |
Report (3 outputs)
Year | Citation | Altmetrics | Link | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2023 | Arranz AM, Askland H, Hardacre S, Scelsi T, Shannon B, 'Coal in a renewable energy transition', Coal Innovation NSW (2023) | ||||
2016 |
Askland HH, Askew M, Hanley J, Sherval M, Farrugia D, Threadgold S, Coffey J, 'Local Attitudes to Changing Land Use - Narrabri Shire', NSW Departmment of Primary Industries, 113 (2016)
|
||||
2012 | Williams A, Askland HH, 'Assessing Creativity: Strategies and Tools to Support Teaching and Learning in Architecture and Design (PP9-1288). Final Report' (2012) |
Grants and Funding
Summary
Number of grants | 27 |
---|---|
Total funding | $1,294,683 |
Click on a grant title below to expand the full details for that specific grant.
20224 grants / $378,457
Mining voids and just transition: reimagining post-mining landscapes$342,054
Funding body: ARC (Australian Research Council)
Funding body | ARC (Australian Research Council) |
---|---|
Project Team | Doctor Hedda Askland, Doctor Hedda Askland, Doctor Meg Sherval |
Scheme | Discovery Projects |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 2022 |
Funding Finish | 2025 |
GNo | G2001366 |
Type Of Funding | C1200 - Aust Competitive - ARC |
Category | 1200 |
UON | Y |
Improving social, cultural and built environment resilience of our coastline communities against natural hazards$24,285
Funding body: University of Newcastle
Funding body | University of Newcastle |
---|---|
Project Team | Dr Irene Perez-Lopez (Lead), Prof Anna Giacomini, Dr Hedda Askland, Ms Shellie Smith |
Scheme | Cross College Research Support Scheme |
Role | Investigator |
Funding Start | 2022 |
Funding Finish | 2022 |
GNo | |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | N |
Draft Hunter Restoration Roadmap: finding pathways for a community-led transformation$10,000
Funding body: College of Human and Social Futures | University of Newcastle
Funding body | College of Human and Social Futures | University of Newcastle |
---|---|
Project Team | Dr Hedda Askland (lead), Dr Meg Sherval, Dr Liam Phelan |
Scheme | CHSF - Matched Funding |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 2022 |
Funding Finish | 2022 |
GNo | |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | N |
CHSF Conference Travel Grant$2,118
Funding body: College of Human and Social Futures | University of Newcastle
Funding body | College of Human and Social Futures | University of Newcastle |
---|---|
Scheme | CHSF - Conference Travel Scheme |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 2022 |
Funding Finish | 2022 |
GNo | |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | N |
20213 grants / $19,137
Environmental humanities: resilience, affect, power and justice in the study of environmental change$14,877
Funding body: Faculty of Education and Arts, University of Newcastle
Funding body | Faculty of Education and Arts, University of Newcastle |
---|---|
Project Team | Dr Heeda Askland (Lead) Prof Duncan McDuie-Ra; Prof Nicola Mai; Dr Matthew Bunn; Dr Randi Irwin; A/Prof Michelle Duffy (Faculty of Science UON); Dr Kaya Barry (Griffith University); Dr Candice Boyd ( University of Melbourne) |
Scheme | Strategic Network and Pilot Project Grants Scheme |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 2021 |
Funding Finish | 2021 |
GNo | |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | N |
CHSF Working Parents Research Relief Scheme$3,000
Funding body: College of Human and Social Futures | University of Newcastle
Funding body | College of Human and Social Futures | University of Newcastle |
---|---|
Scheme | CHSF - Working Parents Research Relief Scheme |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 2021 |
Funding Finish | 2021 |
GNo | |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | N |
CHSF Early Advice Scheme 2021$1,260
Funding body: College of Human and Social Futures | University of Newcastle
Funding body | College of Human and Social Futures | University of Newcastle |
---|---|
Scheme | CHSF - Early Advice Scheme |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 2021 |
Funding Finish | 2021 |
GNo | |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | N |
20203 grants / $480,711
Enabling broader low emissions advocacy coalitions int he NSW coal related sectors $375,711
Funding body: NSW Department of Planning, Industry and Environment
Funding body | NSW Department of Planning, Industry and Environment |
---|---|
Project Team | Dr Alfonzo Martinez Arranz and Dr Hedda Haugen Askland |
Scheme | Coal Innovation NSW Fund |
Role | Investigator |
Funding Start | 2020 |
Funding Finish | 2022 |
GNo | |
Type Of Funding | C2220 - Aust StateTerritoryLocal - Other |
Category | 2220 |
UON | N |
Enabling broader low emissions advocacy coalitions in the NSW coal related sectors$85,000
Funding body: NSW Department of Planning, Industry and Environment
Funding body | NSW Department of Planning, Industry and Environment |
---|---|
Project Team | Doctor Hedda Askland, Dr Alfonso Martinez Arranz |
Scheme | Coal Innovation NSW Fund |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 2020 |
Funding Finish | 2021 |
GNo | G2000307 |
Type Of Funding | C2300 – Aust StateTerritoryLocal – Own Purpose |
Category | 2300 |
UON | Y |
Faculty funding for external engagement in 2020 - Centre for 21st Century Humanities$20,000
Funding body: Faculty of Education and Arts, University of Newcastle
Funding body | Faculty of Education and Arts, University of Newcastle |
---|---|
Project Team | Dr J McIntyre (Director); Dr K Ariotti; A/Prof G Arrighi; Dr H Askland; Dr J Coffey; A/Prof N Cushing; A/Prof H Craig et al |
Scheme | Faculty funding |
Role | Investigator |
Funding Start | 2020 |
Funding Finish | 2020 |
GNo | |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | N |
20192 grants / $106,568
Faculty matching funding for UON PRC Scheme 2019 - Centre for 21st Century Humanities$100,000
Funding body: Faculty of Education and Arts, The University of Newcastle, Australia
Funding body | Faculty of Education and Arts, The University of Newcastle, Australia |
---|---|
Project Team | Dr G Arrighi; Dr H Askland; Prof H Craig; Prof P Dwyer; A/Prof J Gulddal; A/Prof M Harvey; Prof V Haskins (Director); Prof M Johnson; A/Prof B Palmer; A/Prof T Pender; Prof L Ryan |
Scheme | Faculty Funding |
Role | Investigator |
Funding Start | 2019 |
Funding Finish | 2019 |
GNo | |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | N |
Enabling Broader Low-Carbon Coalitions$6,568
Visions of the future of energy technology vary significantly within and across societies, both among experts and among the public. More often than not, such visions are driven by ‘hypes’ around a particular technology, be it carbon capture and storage (CCS), long-distance electricity interconnectors or microgrids (Martínez Arranz 2015, 2016; Zervos, Lins and Muth 2010). With anthropogenic climate change calling for urgent action and a move away from a fossil-fuel dependent energy sector to renewables or low-carbon intensive technologies, it is important to gain a better understanding how such visions are created, circulated and gain momentum.
Funding body: Centre for 21st Century Humanities, University of Newcastle
Funding body | Centre for 21st Century Humanities, University of Newcastle |
---|---|
Project Team | Dr Hedda Haugen Askland, Dr Alfonso Martínez Arranz |
Scheme | C21CH 2019 Projects |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 2019 |
Funding Finish | 2019 |
GNo | |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | N |
20182 grants / $101,745
Faculty matching funding for UON PRC Scheme - Centre for 21st Century Humanities$100,000
Funding body: Faculty of Education and Arts, University of Newcastle
Funding body | Faculty of Education and Arts, University of Newcastle |
---|---|
Project Team | Dr G Arrighi; Dr H Askland; Prof H Craig (Director); Prof P Dwyer; A/Prof J Gulddal; A/Prof M Harvey; Prof V Haskins; Prof M Johnson; Dr B Palmer; A/Prof T Pender; Prof L Ryan; Prof R Smith (Deputy Director). |
Scheme | Faculty funding |
Role | Investigator |
Funding Start | 2018 |
Funding Finish | 2018 |
GNo | |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | N |
Max Panck Institute for Social Anthropology, Germany, Guest Lecture 12 June 2018$1,745
Funding body: Faculty of Education and Arts, University of Newcastle
Funding body | Faculty of Education and Arts, University of Newcastle |
---|---|
Project Team | Hedda Askland |
Scheme | FEDUA Conference Travel Grant |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 2018 |
Funding Finish | 2018 |
GNo | |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | N |
20172 grants / $63,700
Modelling climate change-driven human displacement in the Hunter region of NSW: An interdisciplinary assessment of risks and adaptation strategies$50,000
In 2014, more than 19.3 million people were displaced by disasters in 100 countries and since 2008, an average of 26.4 million people per year have been displaced by climate or weather-related events.i Climate change, the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre (IDMC) argues, ‘in tandem with people’s increasing exposure and vulnerability, is expected to magnify this trend, as extreme weather events become more frequent and intense in the coming decades’.ii Whilst climate change and weather-related disasters mark the lives of people across the globe, the IDMC’s mapping shows that developing countries are consistently worse affected compared to developed countries. Discussion about ‘climate refugees’ or ‘environmental migrants’ accordingly tends to focus on the situation of people in developing countries. However, climate change is also having an impact on people in the developed world through extreme climate- and weather-events, droughts, desertification, sea level rise, and disruption of seasonal weather patterns.
The notion of climate change-induced displacement remains underexplored within the context of the developed world. This project will initiate an inquiry into climate change induced-displacement in Australia, using the Hunter Region of NSW as a case study. Cutting across conventional disciplinary boundaries, the project will draw on insights from engineering, information technology, law, public health and anthropology. By listening to the co-presence of diverse analytical perspectives, the researchers will seek collaborative moments driving new knowledge and a holistic understanding of risks and adaptation strategies in the context of climate change.iii Using climate models and projections of mobility and migration, the project will: (i) investigate how climate change may manifest within the lives of Hunter residents; (ii) assess risks of displacement; (iii) consider legal and logistical tools that are required to adapt to the projected climate reality; (iv) consider political tools for effective adaptation and mitigation; and (v) present a conceptual framework for understanding climate change induced displacement in the context of the Hunter, including how it relates to psychosocial and environmental distress.
Funding body: The University of Newcastle - Research and Innovation Division
Funding body | The University of Newcastle - Research and Innovation Division |
---|---|
Project Team | Dr Hedda Haugen Askland, Dr Raymond Chiong, D Natalie, Lockart, Dr Amy Maguire, Dr Jane Rich |
Scheme | Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Research and Innovation) Grant for Early Career Interdisciplinary Research |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 2017 |
Funding Finish | 2018 |
GNo | |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | N |
Rural Land Use and Community Research Network$13,700
Funding body: University of Newcastle - Faculty of Education and Arts
Funding body | University of Newcastle - Faculty of Education and Arts |
---|---|
Scheme | FEDUA Strategic Networks and Pilot Projects (SNaPP) |
Role | Investigator |
Funding Start | 2017 |
Funding Finish | 2017 |
GNo | |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | N |
20162 grants / $7,000
Eritalgia: Mining and the Disruption of Future Selves$5,000
Funding body: University of Newcastle - Faculty of Education and Arts
Funding body | University of Newcastle - Faculty of Education and Arts |
---|---|
Scheme | FEDUA Strategic Networks and Pilot Projects Scheme |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 2016 |
Funding Finish | 2016 |
GNo | |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | N |
EASA Biennial Conference 2016: Anthropological Legacies and Human Futures$2,000
Funding body: University of Newcastle - Faculty of Education and Arts
Funding body | University of Newcastle - Faculty of Education and Arts |
---|---|
Scheme | Travel Grant |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 2016 |
Funding Finish | 2016 |
GNo | |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | N |
20154 grants / $97,865
Small Holdings Project$52,884
Funding body: NSW Department of Primary Industries
Funding body | NSW Department of Primary Industries |
---|---|
Project Team | Doctor Hedda Askland, Dr MICHAEL Askew |
Scheme | Research Grant |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 2015 |
Funding Finish | 2015 |
GNo | G1501215 |
Type Of Funding | C2400 – Aust StateTerritoryLocal – Other |
Category | 2400 |
UON | Y |
Attitudes to Changing Land Use - the Narrabri Shire$25,000
Funding body: NSW Department of Primary Industries
Funding body | NSW Department of Primary Industries |
---|---|
Project Team | Doctor Hedda Askland, Doctor David Farrugia, Doctor Meg Sherval, Doctor Julia Coffey, Associate Professor Steven Threadgold, Dr MICHAEL Askew |
Scheme | Research Grant |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 2015 |
Funding Finish | 2015 |
GNo | G1401491 |
Type Of Funding | C2400 – Aust StateTerritoryLocal – Other |
Category | 2400 |
UON | Y |
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 |
FEDUA New Staff Grant: Land use, kinship and migration: large-scale resource extraction and the question of home$4,981
Funding body: University of Newcastle - Faculty of Education and Arts
Funding body | University of Newcastle - Faculty of Education and Arts |
---|---|
Scheme | New Staff Grant |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 2015 |
Funding Finish | 2017 |
GNo | |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | N |
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 | Investigator |
Funding Start | 2014 |
Funding Finish | 2014 |
GNo | G1400957 |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | Y |
20124 grants / $24,500
Structures of Architectural Practice: an ethnographic study of six design practices in Sydney.$10,000
Funding body: NSW Architects Registration Board
Funding body | NSW Architects Registration Board |
---|---|
Project Team | Professor Michael Chapman, Doctor Hedda Askland, Mr Ramsey Awad, Associate Professor Lindsay Johnston, Professor Lawrence Nield |
Scheme | Project Grant |
Role | Investigator |
Funding Start | 2012 |
Funding Finish | 2012 |
GNo | G1200828 |
Type Of Funding | Other Public Sector - State |
Category | 2OPS |
UON | Y |
Structures of Architectural Practice: an ethnographic study of six architectural design practices in Sydney$10,000
Funding body: University of Newcastle
Funding body | University of Newcastle |
---|---|
Project Team | Professor Michael Chapman, Doctor Hedda Askland, Mr Ramsey Awad |
Scheme | Linkage Pilot Research Grant |
Role | Investigator |
Funding Start | 2012 |
Funding Finish | 2012 |
GNo | G1201026 |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | Y |
New Staff Grant 2012$3,000
Funding body: University of Newcastle
Funding body | University of Newcastle |
---|---|
Project Team | Doctor Hedda Askland |
Scheme | New Staff Grant |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 2012 |
Funding Finish | 2012 |
GNo | G1200558 |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | Y |
Australian Anthropological Society Conference 2012: Culture and Contest in a Material World, The University of Queensland, 26 -28 September 2012$1,500
Funding body: University of Newcastle - Faculty of Engineering & Built Environment
Funding body | University of Newcastle - Faculty of Engineering & Built Environment |
---|---|
Project Team | Doctor Hedda Askland |
Scheme | Travel Grant |
Role | Lead |
Funding Start | 2012 |
Funding Finish | 2013 |
GNo | G1200931 |
Type Of Funding | Internal |
Category | INTE |
UON | Y |
Research Supervision
Number of supervisions
Current Supervision
Commenced | Level of Study | Research Title | Program | Supervisor Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2024 | PhD | Investigating the Role of Creative Outlets and Sense of Place. | PhD (Sociology & Anthropology), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle | Principal Supervisor |
2023 | PhD | Understanding the Experiences of International Skilled Migrants in Newcastle | PhD (Sociology & Anthropology), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle | Principal Supervisor |
2023 | PhD | Unheard Voices in Development: Examining the Force of the Narrative of Development in the Third World | PhD (Sociology & Anthropology), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle | Principal Supervisor |
2022 | PhD | Barriers To Sustainable Coal Mine Closure In The Hunter Valley, NSW | PhD (Sociology & Anthropology), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle | Principal Supervisor |
2022 | PhD | Legacy, Stewardship and Place Attachment: Elder Land and Landscape Protection at the Mine Frontier | PhD (Sociology & Anthropology), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle | Principal Supervisor |
2020 | PhD | Solarpunk: Ideologies of Resistance, Resilience, and Hope | PhD (Sociology & Anthropology), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle | Principal Supervisor |
2020 | PhD | Wielding the Shield of Tradition | PhD (Sociology & Anthropology), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle | Principal Supervisor |
2020 | PhD | Land Rights and Beyond: Building Counter-Narratives of Power, Struggles and Claims Over Ancestral Domains in Southern Philippines | PhD (Sociology & Anthropology), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle | Principal Supervisor |
2018 | PhD | In Search of Sacredness: Visualising Place through Filmmaking and Participatory Ethnography in Flanders | PhD (Sociology & Anthropology), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle | Principal Supervisor |
Past Supervision
Year | Level of Study | Research Title | Program | Supervisor Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2024 | PhD | The Greyhound: An Ethnography of Stories and Symbols | PhD (Sociology & Anthropology), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle | Principal Supervisor |
2021 | PhD | Navigating the City Negotiating Un/Employment: A Decolonial Exploration of Black African Youth Experiences of Migration, Work, and Aspirations in Deindustrialising Newcastle, Australia | PhD (Sociology & Anthropology), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle | Co-Supervisor |
2021 | PhD | Social Work with Male Survivors of Conflict-related Sexual Violence in Uganda: The Experiences of Practitioners and their Intervention Methods | PhD (Social Work), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle | Principal Supervisor |
2020 | PhD | A Semiological Analysis of Ideological Mythology in Braun’s Post-war German Product Advertising | PhD (Architecture), College of Engineering, Science and Environment, The University of Newcastle | Co-Supervisor |
2020 | PhD | Everyday Witches: Identity and Community Among Young Australian Women Practising Witchcraft | PhD (Sociology & Anthropology), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle | Co-Supervisor |
2020 | PhD | Human Rights and Migration: Perspectives of Zimbabwean Migrants Living in Johannesburg, South Africa | PhD (Social Work), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle | Principal Supervisor |
2018 | PhD | Being Healed: An Ethnography of Ayahuasca and the Self at the Temple of the Way of Light, Iquitos, Peru | PhD (Sociology & Anthropology), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle | Co-Supervisor |
2017 | PhD | The Tale of Two Schools: Design Technology, Digital Mediation and Aesthetic Dispositions within Architectural Design Education | PhD (Architecture), College of Engineering, Science and Environment, The University of Newcastle | Co-Supervisor |
2016 | PhD | Beyond Resettlement as Refugee: Enduring and Emerging Dimensions of 'Displacement' as Cosmological Rupture for Central African Refugee Women | PhD (Sociology & Anthropology), College of Human and Social Futures, The University of Newcastle | Co-Supervisor |
Research Projects
Modelling climate change-driven human displacement in the Hunter region of NSW: An interdisciplinary assessment of risks and adaptation strategies 2017 -
The notion of climate change-induced displacement remains underexplored within the context of the developed world. This project will initiate an inquiry into climate change induced-displacement in Australia, using the Hunter Region of NSW as a case study. Cutting across conventional disciplinary boundaries, the project will draw on insights from engineering, information technology, law, public health and anthropology. By listening to the co-presence of diverse analytical perspectives, the researchers will seek collaborative moments driving new knowledge and a holistic understanding of risks and adaptation strategies in the context of climate change. Using climate models and projections of mobility and migration, the project will: (i) investigate how climate change may manifest within the lives of Hunter residents; (ii) assess risks of displacement; (iii) consider legal and logistical tools that are required to adapt to the projected climate reality; (iv) consider political tools for effective adaptation and mitigation; and (v) present a conceptual framework for understanding climate change induced displacement in the context of the Hunter, including how it relates to psychosocial and environmental distress.
Grants
Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Research and Innovation) Grant for Early Career Interdisciplinary Research
Funding body: The University of Newcastle - Research and Innovation Division
Funding body | The University of Newcastle - Research and Innovation Division |
---|---|
Scheme | Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Research and Innovation) Grant for Early Career Interdisciplinary Research |
Collaborators
Name | Organisation |
---|---|
Doctor Natalie Anne Lockart | University of Newcastle |
Doctor Hedda Haugen Askland | University of Newcastle |
Doctor Jane Louise Rich | University of Newcastle |
Associate Professor Raymond Jun Wen Chiong | University of Newcastle |
Edit
News
News • 28 Oct 2021
Hunter, Illawarra and Far West residents invited to share energy goals
As world leaders commence conversations in Glasgow for the 26th United Nations Climate Change Conference, residents of the Hunter, Illawarra and Far West are being asked to contribute their thoughts on the future of energy in New South Wales.
News • 24 Aug 2020
Survey seeks answers to understand our energy future
What does Australia’s energy future look like?
What do Australians want it to look like?
News • 18 Aug 2020
Journal article compares two case studies to examine displacement
Anthropologist with the Centre for 21st Century Humanities, Dr Hedda Askland has written a new journal article with UON alumnus Dr Georgina Ramsay.
News • 8 Apr 2020
Dr Askland part of research project to study advocacy coalitions
Deputy Director of the Centre for 21st Century Humanities, anthropologist Dr Hedda Askland, is part of a multi-institutional research project led by Dr Alfonso M. Arranz at the University of Melbourne, which aims to better understand the mechanics of “advocacy coalitions” as it relates to diverse energy futures.
News • 3 Apr 2020
Mining Voids: Extraction and emotion at the Australian coal frontier
Anthropologist with the School of Humanities and Social Science and member of the Centre for 21st Century Humanities, Dr Hedda Askland, has published a journal article with Cambridge University Press entitled Mining voids: Extraction and emotion at the Australian coal frontier.
News • 7 Nov 2019
Farmers face unexpected challenges as they navigate modern life on the land
As drought concerns farmers across the country, new research has shown Australian farmers are facing other unexpected challenges as regional Australia continues to evolve and more people from cities escape to a life in the country.
News • 30 Oct 2019
Farmers face unexpected challenges as they navigate modern life on the land
As drought concerns farmers across the country, new research has shown Australian farmers are facing other unexpected challenges as regional Australia continues to evolve and more people from cities escape to a life in the country.
News • 19 Feb 2019
Anthropologist Dr Hedda Askland plays part in unprecedented anti coalmine case win
Centre for 21st Century Humanities Deputy Director, Dr Hedda Askland, has played a significant part in an unprecedented court case that has put a stop to the proposed Rocky Hill Coal Mine in the Gloucester Valley.
News • 22 Jun 2017
Rural Land Use and Community Research Network
Dr Hedda Askland and colleagues from UON and Europe have been awarded funding by the Faculty of Education and Arts (FEDUA) to establish the Rural Land Use and Community Research Network to bring together local and international scholars working in the area of rurality and community, rural land use change and conflict, and migration and mobility. The aim of the network is to explore rurality (as locality) through the lens of global movement, as it manifests through the movement of people (e.g. urban-‐rural migration, asylum seekers and refugees), minerals (e.g. coal and gas), and agricultural products.
News • 26 May 2017
Rural Neighbours in times of change: a two day symposium
The Centre for Social Research and Regional Futures' Rural Land Use and Community Research Network presents a two day symposium: Rural Neighbours in Times of Change. The Network brings together local and international scholars working in the area of rurality and community, rural land use change and conflict, and migration and mobility. The aim of the network is to explore rurality (as locality) through the lens of global mobilities, as it manifests through movement of people (e.g. urban-rural migration, asylum seekers and refugees), minerals (e.g. coal and gas), and agricultural products. During a two-day workshop, the network will focus on the theme of ‘rural neighbours’, with the sub-themes of locality and globalisation; migration and displacement; place and emplacement.
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.
Dr Hedda Askland
Position
Associate Professor
School of Humanities, Creative Ind and Social Sci
College of Human and Social Futures
Focus area
Sociology and Anthropology
Contact Details
hedda.askland@newcastle.edu.au | |
Phone | (02) 4921 7067 |
Fax | (02) 4921 6933 |
Link |
Office
Room | SR137 |
---|---|
Building | Behavioural Science |
Location | Callaghan University Drive Callaghan, NSW 2308 Australia |