THE podcast: an interview with Ngiare Brown, chancellor of James Cook University

By sara.custer, 31 August, 2023
Ngiare Brown is the first female and the first Indigenous chancellor of James Cook University. Here, she shares what she hopes to achieve during her tenure, including making higher education a place for Indigenous students
Article type
Podcast
Summary

Listen to this podcast on SpotifyApple podcasts or Google podcasts.

Ngiare Brown is the first female and first Indigenous chancellor of James Cook University. She has joined the institution at a time when efforts to indigenise Australian higher education are taking root, with the recent interim report of the Universities Accord saying that putting First Nations at the heart of Australian higher education would bring positive, long-term changes for the sector. 

Dr Brown intends to make higher education a place for Indigenous students, starting with James Cook, one of her alma maters. In this interview, she explains how she wants to balance that goal with an acknowledgment of the legacy of the university’s namesake. We talk more about what she’d like to see changed in higher education, how researchers should engage better with First Nations communities and how a welcome to country statement can make a big difference when it’s done the right way. 

If you would like advice and insight from academics and university staff delivered direct to your inbox each week, sign up for the Campus newsletter                

Standfirst
Ngiare Brown is the first female and the first Indigenous chancellor of James Cook University. Here, she shares what she hopes to achieve during her tenure, including making higher education a place for Indigenous students

comment