@misc{go-sam_indigenous_2008, title = {Indigenous {Design} {Paradigms}}, url = {https://architectureau.com/articles/indigenous-design-paradigms/}, urldate = {2021-06-25}, journal = {Architecture AU}, author = {Go-Sam, Carroll}, year = {2008}, keywords = {Architecture}, } @article{go-sam_remote_2021, title = {Remote indigenous settlements - more than tiny dots on a map}, volume = {105}, url = {https://search.informit.org/doi/abs/10.3316/INFORMIT.284859308820958}, doi = {10.3316/informit.284859308820958}, abstract = {Indigenous people and their settlements are more than tiny dots littered across a vast continent. These smaller settlements are under threat of closure by top-down policies in favour of urban concentration.}, number = {5}, urldate = {2021-08-24}, journal = {Architecture Australia}, author = {Go-Sam, Carroll and Memmott, Paul}, month = aug, year = {2021}, note = {Number: 5 ZSCC: 0000001 Publisher: Architecture Media}, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {53--54}, } @incollection{go-sam_mobilising_2018, address = {Singapore}, title = {Mobilising {Indigenous} {Agency} {Through} {Cultural} {Sustainability} in {Architecture}: {Are} {We} {There} {Yet}?}, isbn = {978-981-10-6904-8}, shorttitle = {Mobilising {Indigenous} {Agency} {Through} {Cultural} {Sustainability} in {Architecture}}, url = {https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-6904-8_14}, abstract = {This chapter proposes that architectural projects, for, with and by Indigenous people, could have more leverage if the goals of cultural sustainability were adopted, thereby mobilising greater participation and agency more effectively. The sustainability agenda advances resource accountability to moderate economic growth providing socio-economic benefits for future generations. This concern was first raised about the overdeveloped Western world; however, drawing on the writings of Indigenous and other scholars, we found that socio-economic sustainability concepts derived from Western paradigms are not easily adapted to all circumstances and development practices, because Indigenous Australians have not benefited to anything like the same degree as their non-Indigenous counterparts, somewhat undermining cultural sustainability.}, language = {en}, urldate = {2021-08-24}, booktitle = {The {Handbook} of {Contemporary} {Indigenous} {Architecture}}, publisher = {Springer}, author = {Go-Sam, Carroll and Keys, Cathy}, editor = {Grant, Elizabeth and Greenop, Kelly and Refiti, Albert L. and Glenn, Daniel J.}, year = {2018}, doi = {10.1007/978-981-10-6904-8_14}, note = {ZSCC: NoCitationData[s0] }, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {347--380}, } @inproceedings{go-sam_fabricating_2011, address = {Brisbane, QLD}, title = {Fabricating {Blackness}: {Aboriginal} identity constructs in the production and authorisation of architecture}, url = {https://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:245276}, abstract = {The architect and writer, Fantin concluded that, ‘Aboriginal identity is not separate from external forces and influences and architecture is one of those influences. The difficulty in evaluating Fantin’s assertion of the power exerted by architecture is firstly due to a lack of any convincing documented measurement of supposed forces, and secondly there is a relative absence of Indigenous voices in the discourse; so it becomes problematic to conclude the extent architecture exerts this presumed power. Another view presented, is that architecture incorporating Aboriginal themes derived from cultural and totemic references, reinforces identity stereotypes. Leading to the conclusion that several of the completed works consciously and deliberately represent Aboriginality as a primitive and romanticised concept. This latter view poses a contradictory perception that contemporary Indigenous client groups or individuals who participate in projects are passively or naïvely complicit in endorsing regressive, essentialised notions of identity.}, language = {en}, booktitle = {Audience: {The} 28th {Society} of {Architectural} {Historians}, {Australia} and {New} {Zealand} ({SAHANZ}) {Annual} {Conference}}, publisher = {SAHANZ}, author = {Go-Sam, Carroll}, year = {2011}, keywords = {Architecture, Urban and cultural heritage}, pages = {1--27}, } @misc{hall_pilyii_2020, title = {Pilyii papulu {Purrukaj}-ji ({Good} housing to prevent sickness): a study of housing, crowding and hygiene-related infections diseases in the {Barkly} region, {Nothern} {Territory}}, url = {https://public-health.uq.edu.au/files/9038/Barkly%20housing%20and%20health%20report_UQAnyinginyi_Finalv2%20March%202020%281%29.pdf}, journal = {University of Queensland, School of Public Health}, author = {Hall, Nina Lansbury and Memmott, Paul and Barnes, Samuel K. and Redmond, Andrew and Go-Sam, Carroll and Nash, Daphne and Frank, Trisha Nururla and Simpson, Patrick (Pepy)}, year = {2020}, }