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Australian Historical Studies


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Notes on Contributors

Online Publication Date: 01 September 2009

To cite this Article (2009)'Notes on Contributors',Australian Historical Studies,40:3,273 274 To link to this Article: DOI: 10.1080/10314610903105316 URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10314610903105316

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Australian Historical Studies, September 2009; 40(3): 273274

Notes on Contributors
Richard Broome Richard Broome is Associate Professor of History at La Trobe University, co-editor of Australian Historical Studies from 2010 and a member of the Australian Academy of the Humanities. His recent books are the prizewinning Aboriginal Victorians (2005) and A Man of All Tribes (2006) (with Corinne Manning). His completely rewritten fourth edition of Aboriginal Australians will appear early in 2010. He is currently writing a history of the Aborigines Advancement League in Victoria. Email: r.broome@latrobe.edu.au Catharine Coleborne Catharine Coleborne is Associate Professor of History at the University of Waikato in New Zealand. She has published on the theme of the colonial family and insanity in the Journal of Family History and Social History of Medicine. Her book Madness in the Family: Insanity, Institutions and the Australasian Colonial World, 1860s 1914 will appear with Palgrave in 2010. She is currently working on a Marsden-funded project (Royal Society of New Zealand) about migration, insanity and ethnicity across three colonial sites with Professor Angela McCarthy (Otago). Email: cathyc@waikato.ac.nz Russell McGregor Russell McGregor is Associate Professor of History in the School of Arts and Social Sciences at James Cook University, Townsville. He has published extensively on the history of settler Australian ideas about Aborigines, including the award-winning book Imagined Destinies (1997). His more recent publications focus on postWorld War Two assimilation policies, which leads into his current research project examining contestation over the terms on which Aboriginal people would be included within the Australian nation. Email: russell.mcgregor@jcu.edu.au Bill Gammage Bill Gammage is an Adjunct Professor (or unemployed but working) at the Humanities Research Centre, Australian National University. He is writing on Aboriginal land management at the time of contact, from which his article in this volume grew. His books are: The Broken Years: Australian Soldiers in the Great War (1974), An Australian in the First World War (1976), Narrandera Shire (1986), and The Sky Travellers: Journeys in New Guinea 193839 (1998). He co-edited the 1938 volume of Australias Bicentennial History, and has advised on several film, TV and radio productions. Email: bill.gammage@anu.edu.au Jessie Mitchell Jessie Mitchell is currently working as a research associate on an ARC project with Professor Ann Curthoys, investigating the relationship between Aboriginal policy-making and the arrival of self-government in the Australian colonies in the mid-nineteenth century. This research was also undertaken as part of a creative fellowship at the State Library of Victoria. Jessie
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ISSN 1031-461X print/ISSN 1940-5049 online # 2009 Taylor & Francis DOI: 10.1080/10314610903105316

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Australian Historical Studies, 40, 2009

has also written about the first Evangelical missionaries in the Australian colonies, and has a book on this topic in progress. Email: jessie.mitchell@usyd.edu.au Janine Rizzetti Janine Rizzetti is a postgraduate student in the School of History, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences at La Trobe University. A former secondary

school and special education teacher, she has worked as a curriculum developer and educational designer in online, TAFE and higher education settings. She is undertaking a thesis on the sacking of Judge Willis, and tutors in undergraduate European history. Email: jerizzetti@students.latrobe.edu.au

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