The only Indigenous law centre in Australia. Research areas: alcohol regulation in the Northern Territory; constitutional reform; home ownership on Aboriginal land; Indigenous land reform; UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People; Uluru Statement from the Heart; violence against Indigenous women and children.
The Jumbunna Institute for Indigenous Education and Research aims to produce the highest quality research on Indigenous legal and policy issues and to develop highly skilled Indigenous researchers. Research hubs: child protection advocacy; cultural resilience; Indigenous law and justice; Indigenous people and work; Indigenous archives and data stewardship.
Australia’s only Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander community controlled health research institute. We work for the health and wellbeing of Australia's Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples through quality research, knowledge translation and by supporting Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health researchers. Patron: Dr Lowitja O’Donoghue AC CBE DSG, a Yankunytjatjara woman, born in 1932 at De Rose Hill, in the remote north-west corner of South Australia. She was taken away from her mother at the age of two, along with two of her older sisters.
Moondani Balluk Indigenous Academic Unit works across Aboriginal, non-governmental organisations and community spaces to deliver teaching, research and support. We work to: provide assistance and support for students; promote Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander research and researchers; collaborate with and support community groups; partner with government groups.
Nulungu Research Institute is a Kimberley-based organisation of collaborating Aboriginal and non-Indigenous researchers, each with extensive practical and theoretical knowledge. Nulungu’s vision is ‘to conduct exceptional and collaborative research which is transformative, decolonising and of value to Aboriginal people’. Nulungu encourages the pursuit of excellence in research through valuing community-based Indigenous knowledge. Nulungu focuses on the core research themes of culture country and Language, transformational education, Aboriginal wellbeing, sustainable lifeways and social justice, and policy, practice and evaluation.
We are an independent not-for profit organisation, the lead body for reconciliation in Australia. We promote and facilitate reconciliation by building relationships, respect and trust between the wider Australian community and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.