¶¶Òõ¶ÌÊÓƵ

Undergraduate courses

Indigenous Studies is a major or minor specialisation within the Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Social Sciences (and their double degrees). A minor specialisation can be undertaken as part of a Bachelor of Design, Bachelor of Economics, Bachelor of Fine Arts, or Bachelor of Media. Individual courses can be studied as elective or General Education courses available in many UNSW Bachelor's degrees.

Here is some useful information when choosing your Indigenous Studies courses for 2024, whether you are looking for General Education courses, electives or whether you are completing a minor or major in Indigenous Studies. Courses are offered at different terms as listed below.

Explore our undergraduate courses

T1, 2024

  • Indigenous Australia is the gateway course to the Indigenous Studies Major. In this course students will gain an understanding of the diversity of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cultures, peoples and societies. A central focus of the course is the ways in which the philosophical frameworks of Indigenous knowledge systems continue to inform contemporary Indigenous practice that continues to shape Indigenous identities today. Taught from a range of perspectives, students will develop an understanding of social, cultural, political, economic, and ecological aspects of Indigenous Knowledge, which are key foundational elements to the Indigenous Studies Major.

    Prerequisites:Ìý±·´Ç²Ô±ð

    Credit Points:Ìý6

    Offering Term: T1, 2024

    Delivery Mode:Ìý²Ñ³Ü±ô³Ù¾±³¾´Ç»å²¹±ô

    Indicative Contact Hours:Ìý4

  • This course aims to develop student understanding of the role of public policy in shaping Indigenous communities. It considers case studies of policy development by Australian Commonwealth, State and Territory authorities. It provides students with a theoretical framework for understanding policy and policy development processes and observing how key actors and institutions shape policy outcomes. The course considers opportunities for participation and engagement in policy formulation, and reflects on past policies which have contributed to Indigenous disadvantage and marginalisation. Students will critically analyse past and current policies and develop their understanding of the important role that policy plays in shaping community.

    Prerequisites:Ìý30 units of credit at Level 1

    Credit Points:Ìý6

    Offering Term: T1, 2024

    Delivery Mode:Ìý°¿²Ô±ô¾±²Ô±ð

    Indicative Contact Hours:Ìý4

  • The course explores the way in which gender influences and structures the experiences of Indigenous women and men in the past and the present. It encourages students to engage in critical analysis and discussions by presenting relevant examples of the way in which gender and Indigeneity intersect in different contexts. The course material covers a range of issues involving gender and gender roles, including land, art and popular culture, activism, feminism, violence, and race. Particular attention is paid to colonial constructs of gender and gender roles within Aboriginal communities and Aboriginal women's and men's roles in subverting the colonisation of their identities.

    Prerequisites:Ìý36 units of credit

    Credit Points:Ìý6

    Offering Term: T1, 2024

    Delivery Mode: In person

    Indicative Contact Hours:Ìý4

  • This course explores Australia's Indigenous histories and their contemporary resonance. It offers students an overview of relationships between settlers and Indigenous peoples, focusing on contact zones and tracing some of the ways Indigenous people have made their own histories in varied contexts of violence and settler colonialism. The course material will cover nineteenth century Indigenous travellers and Indigenous judicial proceedings, examine violence and friendship, study reserves and resistance, and historicise displacement and the many novel articulations of land rights. Students will engage with controversies attached to representing Indigenous histories in the present, and complete in-depth and independent historical research.

    Prerequisites:Ìý36 units of credit

    Credit Points:Ìý6

    Offering Term: T1, 2024

    Delivery Mode: In person

    Indicative Contact Hours:Ìý4

T2, 2024

  • Representations and misrepresentations of Australian Indigeneity as part of the national identity are most often portrayed through forms of popular culture. Popular Culture of Indigenous Australia will focus on the participation of Indigenous people in these fields and how that involvement influences national identities. The course will explore the complexities of Indigenous identities and the nuances in the way these identities are expressed. Students are encouraged to reflect on Indigenous place and space as part of their own identities and further reflect on the place of indigeneity in the national consciousness.

    Prerequisites: 18 units of credit at Level 1

    Credit Points:Ìý6

    Offering Term: T2, 2024

    Delivery Mode:Ìý²Ñ³Ü±ô³Ù¾±³¾´Ç»å²¹±ô

    Indicative Contact Hours:Ìý4

  • There are (at least) two sides to the colonial relationship. In this class we focus on the ways in which colonialism is enmeshed with White knowledge traditions and cultures so that we can better understand the complex relationship between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australia. Students will be introduced to key concepts and thinkers in the fields of Critical Race and Whiteness theory and together we will apply them to everyday experience and popular culture. At the theory and application learning stage of the Indigenous Studies Major, this course will help students develop their understanding of identity politics that are deeply entangled with a variety of political and intellectual debates in Australia.

    Prerequisites:Ìý36 units of credit 

    Credit Points:Ìý6

    Offering Term: T2, 2024

    Delivery Mode:Ìý²Ñ³Ü±ô³Ù¾±³¾´Ç»å²¹±ô

    Indicative Contact Hours:Ìý4

  • (taught by Humanities and Languages)

    UNSW’s 2025 strategy offers a framework for addressing social justice aspirations of disadvantaged and marginalised communities. This course will give you the research tools to understand the cultural, social, and political dimensions of environmental problems like poor air and water quality caused by industrial pollution. You will learn about the environmental justice movement which has sought to rectify the ways that environmental harm is disproportionately experienced by groups of people who live with structured social inequality. Exploration of a range of key historical and contemporary case studies will give you the opportunity to consider the contradictions, dilemmas and complexities of environmental issues. Key questions running through this course include: What does justice mean? Who benefits from particular ways of imagining and interacting with the environment? What do practices of responsibility and care look like in situations where slow violence is taking place? This course will consider these questions with respect to people who are living with complex global entanglements and who are impinging upon the worlds of other species. The course is taught with an interdisciplinary approach that draws on materials from anthropology, multispecies ethnography, development studies, gender studies, human geography, political science, science and technology studies, and sociology.

    Prerequisites:Ìý48 UOC including 6 UOC at Level 1 and 6 UOC at Level 2 in one of the following specialisations, Environmental Humanities, Geographical Studies, Indigenous Studies, or International Studies

    Credit Points:Ìý6

    Offering Term: T2, 2024

    Delivery Mode:Ìý²Ñ³Ü±ô³Ù¾±³¾´Ç»å²¹±ô

    Indicative Contact Hours:Ìý4

T3, 2024

  • In this course students are introduced to Aboriginal Sydney through local written and oral histories, as well as notable works in film, performance, television and art, seeking to make visible Aboriginal experiences, lives and connections to place in the city. Different approaches to urban history and to understanding the relationship between identity, memory and place are discussed against the broader context of imperial and colonial history and the marginalisation of Aboriginal land and heritage. With a specific focus on doing place-specific research, students are encouraged to get outside of the classroom and visit the places they are learning about.

    ±Ê°ù±ð°ù±ð±ç³Ü¾±²õ¾±³Ù±ð²õ:ÌýNone

    Credit Points:Ìý6

    Offering Term: T3, 2024

    Delivery Mode:Ìý²Ñ³Ü±ô³Ù¾±³¾´Ç»å²¹±ô

    Indicative Contact Hours:Ìý4

  • The focus of this course is on the role of museums and art galleries in the representation of Indigenous peoples and their cultures. The course begins with an introduction to Indigenous material culture, in both pre-contact and contact Australia. Students will also learn about the collection, study and display of Indigenous objects by museums and galleries. In this context disciplines of anthropology, ethnography, archaeology and museology are examined. Particular attention is given to the ways in which we can study objects and their different meanings as they journey from Indigenous contexts to non-Indigenous institutions. Students undertake an excursion to one or more local museums and participate in interactive seminar discussion as part of this course.

    Prerequisites:Ìý30 units of credit at Level 1

    Credit Points:Ìý6

    Offering Term: T3, 2024

    Delivery Mode:Ìý²Ñ³Ü±ô³Ù¾±³¾´Ç»å²¹±ô

    Indicative Contact Hours:Ìý4

  • This course explores Indigenous perspectives on the management of country, waterways, culture and heritage in Australia. By exploring intersections between cultural heritage management practices, the environment, Indigenous knowledges and the contemporary space, students will gain an insight into best practice models for cultural heritage management and associated practices of sustainability and maintenance of Australia's rich cultural heritage and the environment. A compulsory field trip for this course incurs an additional cost.

    Prerequisites:Ìý36 units of credit 

    Credit Points:Ìý6

    Offering Term: T3, 2024

    Delivery Mode: In person

    Indicative Contact Hours:Ìý3

  • This is the Capstone course for students completing the Indigenous Studies Major. The course draws on content, themes and theories from all levels of the Indigenous Studies Major to consolidate understandings of the convergences that characterise the relations between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australia. Students in this course will learn how to explore the deeper complexities of their chosen disciplines and Indigenous Australia, and practise ways to productively engage their boundaries, limits and agendas. Students will have the opportunity to refine their analytical and communicative capacities to navigate these boundaries as their preparation for professional practice or further study.

    Prerequisites: 120 units of credit overall, enrolment in a major in Indigenous Studies and enrolled in the final term of an Arts Faculty single or dual degree program

    Credit Points:Ìý6

    Offering Term: T3, 2024

    Delivery Mode: In person

    Indicative Contact Hours:Ìý3

2025

  • Indigenous Australian Political History tells the story of Indigenous resistance, activism and political organisation during the twentieth century in Australia. Each week focuses on the story of a particular Indigenous leader, with emphasis on the historical contexts and political environments that shaped their perspectives and actions. Brought together, the course forms a narrative revealing the recurring themes, directions, tensions, successes and legacies of Indigenous political history.

    Prerequisites:Ìý30 units of credit at Level 1

    Credit Points:Ìý6

    Offering Term:Ìý2025

    Delivery Mode:Ìý²Ñ³Ü±ô³Ù¾±³¾´Ç»å²¹±ô

    Indicative Contact Hours:Ìý4

Get in touch with us your preferred way

If you have any questions or would like more information about the program, please contact us or subscribe to Nura Gili to stay up to date with the latest news, updates, engagements and events.

Acknowledgement of Country

UNSW is located on the unceded territory of the Bidjigal/Bedegal (Kensington campus), Gadigal (City and Paddington campuses) and Ngunnawal peoples (Canberra) who are the Traditional Custodians of the lands where each campus of UNSW is situated.