We undertake world-leading research into human history and behaviour, in the past and present. Our research has a comprehensive and interdisciplinary base within the fields of history, archaeology, and geography. Our research section consists of around 80 academics, postdocs and research students housed at the leafy surrounds of the Flinders University campus at Bedford Park.
History
Historians at Flinders University investigate societies and cultures in Australia, Asia and the Pacific, Europe, the Mediterranean and the Middle East, North America, and Antarctica over the last millennium.
Our research strengths lie in histories of empire and colonialism, violence and humanitarianism, gender and sexuality, environment and politics, migration and border control, religion and ideology.
Archaeology
Flinders archaeologists are discipline leading researchers who undertake innovative projects all over the world.
Regardless of where we work, Archaeology at Flinders is distinguished by its strong and ongoing commitment to community-led archaeology - working in collaboration with communities on projects that are relevant, useful and valuable to them.
Our research in Indigenous, maritime and historical archaeology and archaeological science crosses boundaries to provide critical insights into the complexity and creativity of the human story over the last 2 million years.
Geography
We are a team with strong research performance and international leadership in three specific areas that capture the multidisciplinary nature of applied geography research:
(a) environmental geography (research on the human dimensions and perceptions of environmental risk, environmental impact assessment and management, climate change adaptation/resilience
(b) population and development geography (how geographies of development more specifically sustainable development are configured by population growth and mobilities of workers, volunteers and tourists, and
(c) social geography (how geographical space is shaped by inequalities in wealth and human wellbeing).
Professor Peter Monteath
Modern European and Australian history, German history, Prisoners of War.
Matthew Flinders Professor Penny Edmonds
Australian colonial history, empire, humanitarianism, reconciliation, critical theory and gender.
Professor Matthew Fitzpatrick
European history, German history, colonial and imperial history.
Dr James Kane
Middle Ages, history of the crusades, medieval historiography, and the literature and languages of medieval western Europe.
Associate Professor Catherine Kevin
Australian history and feminist history, particularly gendered violence, the politics and experience of the reproductive body and Indigenous-settler relations.
Professor Andrekos Varnava
Imperial and colonial histories, the histories of war and conflict, and the histories of migration and migrant control.
Dr Romain Fathi
First World War, Commemorations, Corpses, Humanitarianism, Red Cross, Australian and European History.
Dr Prudence Flowers
Social movement activism, modern conservatism, medicine and public health, and the politics of gender, sexuality, the body, abortion and family planning, modern US and Australian history.
Dr Alessandro Antonello
Environmental and international histories of Antarctica, the cryosphere, and the world’s oceans in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, histories of seagrass and other nearshore, intertidal and subtidal environments.
Dr Evan Smith
British and Australian history, immigration politics and history, Marxism, race relations, riots and activism.
Dr Micaela Pattison
Scientific, economic, and ideological 'creations' of modern femininity in the interwar, ways that shifting definitions of age categories and 'healthiness' shaped gender discourse, women's activism and gendered experiences of urban life in the interwar.
Associate Professor Wendy van Duivenvoorde
Maritime trade and shipbuilding in the ancient Mediterranean and Northern Europe, late 16th and early 17th-century Dutch shipbuilding, ships of exploration and Indiamen, ship's fastenings and anchors.
Professor Heather Burke
Construction and negotiation of class and status through material culture, the archaeology of cross-cultural engagement and the links between cultural heritage, memory and past and present social identity, the 'frontier' and its social and material effects, particularly the archaeology of frontier conflict in Queensland.
Professor Claire Smith
Symbolic communication, decolonisation and Indigenous knowledges.
Professor Jonathan Benjamin
Archaeology; submerged landscapes; coastal and maritime archaeology; impacts of sea-level changes on past human societies; aerial archaeology; 3D recording and interpretation for archaeology; Mesolithic-Neolithic transition; scientific diving.
Associate Professor Alice Gorman
Archaeology and cultural heritage management of space exploration, focusing on orbital debris, terrestrial launch sites, and tracking stations.
Associate Professor Ian Moffat
Archaeological geophysics, isotope geochemistry, sedimentology, sequence stratigraphy, geoarchaeology, site formation processes.
Associate Professor Mike Morley
Archaeological site formation processes and the reconstruction of palaeoenvironments at various scales through the study of site micro- and macro-stratigraphy, geological sequences and geomorphological landforms.
Associate Professor Liam M. Brady
Rock art, material culture, social networks, maritime specialisation in island and coastal contexts, decolonising archaeological practice in Indigenous contexts, prominent places as beacons to structure people's movements, encounters and connections.
Associate Professor Martin Polkinghorne
Archaeology of Southeast Asia, Angkor, archaeometry, archaeology of the early modern period, politcal economy and archaeology.
Professor Amy Roberts
Archaeology and anthropology of Indigenous Australia, Yorke Peninsula, River Murray and Mallee; rock art; the relationship between archaeology and Indigenous peoples as well as anthropology; archaeological science.
Dr John McCarthy
Digital 3D techniques for maritime archaeology; new avenues of research made possible by digital surveys of shipwrecks, including the creation of digital 3D libraries for historic vessels, and on new modes of research dissemination and engagement, including virtual dive experiences
Dr Daryl Wesley
Indigenous and historical archaeological studies in Australia; archaeology of culture contact between South East Asians, Europeans and Aboriginal people in remote north-western Arnhem Land through hybrid economies; rock art of Arnhem Land.
Dr Alex Francke
Climate-human-landscape interaction, Late Quaternary landscapes and geomorphology, Late Quaternary climates, isotope geochemistry, geochemistry, lake sediments
Dr Chelsea Wiseman
Submerged landscape archaeology, maritime archaeology, coastal archaeology, prehistoric archaeology of the Levant, archaeological remote sensing, geographic information systems
Associate Professor Udoy Saikia
Population dynamics, human wellbeing and sustainable development in Asia and the Pacific region.
Professor Beverley Clarke
Coastal climate adaptation, coastal management, community engagement in environmental management, marine protected area management, natural resource management and coasts, environmental impact assessment, policy evaluation.
Professor Susanne Schech
Critical development studies (esp. development volunteering, culture and social change, gender and development, poverty reduction policy making); social and cultural geographies of migration, ethnicity and race (esp. refugee and migrant settlement, constructions of racial and ethnic identities).
Dr Gareth Butler
Sustainable tourism development, community engagement, tourism mobilities, tourism & migration, socio-cultural impacts of tourism, independent travel, national parks.
Sturt Rd, Bedford Park
South Australia 5042
South Australia | Northern Territory
Global | Online
CRICOS Provider: 00114A TEQSA Provider ID: PRV12097 TEQSA category: Australian University
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