Aileen Moreton-Robinson


Aileen Moreton-Robinson is an Australian academic, indigenous feminist, author and activist for indigenous rights. She is an Aboriginal woman of the Goenpul tribe, part of the Quandamooka nation on Stradbroke Island in Queensland. She was the first Aboriginal person to be appointed to a mainstream lecturing position in women's studies in Australia. She has held positions in women's studies at Flinders University and Indigenous studies at Griffith University and Queensland University of Technology. She is currently Professor of Indigenous Research at RMIT and formerly Dean, Indigenous Research and Engagement at the Queensland University of Technology and Director of the National Indigenous Research and Knowledges Network. She completed a PhD at Griffith University in 1999, with a thesis titled Talkin' up to the white woman : Indigenous women and feminism in Australia. The thesis was later published as a book in 1999 and was short-listed for the New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards and the Stanner Award.

Early life

Moreton-Robinson was born in 1956, of the Goenpul tribe, part of the Quandamooka nation on Stradbroke Island in Queensland, Australia. Aileen showed promise as a student in high school, where she received an offer of a scholarship to a Catholic boarding school, which she declined. Her experience of racism and discrimination in high school led to her failing to graduate and becoming politically involved in movements for Aboriginal land rights and human rights for Aboriginal people.
Aileen was later accepted to the Australian National University as a mature student, and at the time she was the only Aboriginal student at the university. She completed a 1st class honors degree in Sociology from the Australian National University and her doctorate from Griffith University. Aileen's doctoral thesis was titled Talkin' up to the white woman : Indigenous women and feminism in Australia. Her thesis was subsequently published as a book in 1999 which was short-listed for the New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards and the Stanner Award for indigenous writing.

Career

Moreton-Robinson taught Indigenous studies at Griffith University in Brisbane and Women's Studies at Flinders University in Adelaide. She was an Australian Research Council Postdoctoral Fellow at the Australian Studies Centre, University of Queensland. She worked at Queensland University of Technology from 2006-2019, becoming Professor of Indigenous Studies and Dean of Indigenous Research and Engagement. On 17 June 2016 she was the first Aboriginal Professor to be conferred the title of Distinguished Professor by QUT. She is currently Professor of Indigenous Research at RMIT in Melbourne, and an Indigenous Elder Scholar in Residence.
Moreton-Robinson is the Director of the National Indigenous Research Knowledges Network, a former Council Member of the Native American Indigenous Studies Association, Executive member of National, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Higher Education, President of Australian Critical whiteness studies Association, Member of Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies, and has held positions on a number of boards, advisory committees and associations. Moreton-Robinson established and is an editor for the International eJournal of Critical Indigenous Studies.
She has been invited to and presented at the University of Washington, University of California Los Angeles, Oberlin College, University of London, University of Geneva, University of Illinois, Dartmouth, Wesleyan University, University of Hawaii, University of Michigan and the University of Alberta.
Distinguished Professor Moreton-Robinson developed a masterclass for Indigenous postgraduate students. The program is designed to build research skills and to improve the completion rates of Indigenous researchers. The Indigenous Research Methodologies Masterclass is the only Indigenous-designed and evidence-based model contributing to closing the education gap in Australia.

Major Contributions to Theory

Moreton-Robinson's research and writing has focused on the experience of Aboriginal Australians since colonial settlement and issues of race and Whiteness studies, post-colonialism, women's studies and indigenous feminism, indigenous studies, native title law and Aboriginal land rights.
Moreton-Robinson through her series of journal articles which where complied to create the book "The White Possessive" is considered to have made a significant contribution to the field of Indigenous Studies. Maori academic, Hemopereki Simon, refers to this collection of articles and the theory derived from them as, "The White Possessive Doctrine" during his application of Moreton-Robinson's theory to Aotearoa New Zealand.

Recognition and awards

Books