Skip to main content

SCHOOL OF ARCHAEOLOGY & ANTHROPOLOGY

  • Home
  • People
    • Head of School
    • Academics
    • Professional staff
    • Visitors
      • Past visitors
    • Current HDR students
    • Graduated HDR students
    • Alumni
  • Events
    • Anthropology Seminar Series
    • ANU Migration Seminar Series
    • Biological Anthropology Research Seminars
    • Centre for Archaeological Research Seminar Series
    • Conferences
      • Past conferences
  • News
  • Students
    • Study with us
      • Field schools
      • Undergraduate programs
      • Graduate programs
      • Higher Degree by Research
  • Study options
    • Anthropology
    • Archaeology
    • Biological Anthropology
    • Development Studies
  • Research
    • Anthropology
    • Archaeology
    • Biological Anthropology
    • Collective Biography of Archaeology in the Pacific
      • About us
      • Team
      • Histories of Archaeology
      • Events
      • News
      • Projects
      • Publications
      • Blog
      • Contact us
    • Kin and Connection
    • Southeast Kernow Archaeological Survey
    • Publications
    • Collections
  • Contact us

Centres

  • Centre for Native Title Anthropology

Related Sites

  • ANU College of Arts & Social Sciences
  • Research School of Humanities and the Arts
  • Centre for Heritage & Museum Studies
  • Australian National Internships Program

Centre for Native Title Anthropology

ARCHANTH

Related sites

Administrator

Breadcrumb

HomePeopleDr Lainie Schultz
Dr Lainie Schultz
Dr Lainie Schultz

Position: Alumni in Anthropology
School and/or Centres: School of Archaeology and Anthropology

Email: elaine.schultz@anu.edu.au

  • Biography

Research Interests: Indigenous rights, anthropology of museums, collaborative museology, cultural heritage management, citizenship studies

Thesis title: Interculturality and the New Museology: indigenous self-determination in a culturally hybrid environment
 
Self-determination is frequently expressed as a priority in the realization of Indigenous rights, articulating the need to recognize peoples' rights to decide the course of their own political, economic, and social development. Collaboration is a process often touted as a means of achieving this self-determination, establishing partnerships between Indigenous and non-Indigenous individuals and organizations and giving Aboriginal peoples a voice in deciding how their needs and aspirations are to be met. The equality of negotiations in these relationships, however, is often less than implied, as Indigenous communities of necessity must navigate existing (and foreign) social, economic, political, and cultural systems.

My research takes a closer look at the process of collaboration in order to gain a greater understanding of what it means for a minority population to be self-determining, with the implication this carries of autonomous action, while simultaneously operating within the frameworks of another, dominant society. I do so with a focus on cultural heritage management, examining the complex relationships at play as Aboriginal communities work to represent themselves and utilize the resources of the Australian Museum in Sydney , and at Muru Mittigar, an Aboriginal cultural center in Western Sydney .

Publications:

Schultz, Lainie. 2011. Collaborative Museology and the Visitor. Museum Anthropology 34(1):1-12.