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<ONIXMessage release="3.0" xmlns="http://ns.editeur.org/onix/3.0/reference"><Header><Sender><SenderName>Ubiquity Press</SenderName><EmailAddress>tech@ubiquitypress.com</EmailAddress></Sender><SentDateTime>20260403T174819</SentDateTime><MessageNote>Generated by RUA metadata exporter</MessageNote></Header><Product><RecordReference>utsepress-25-e-15-978-0-9872369-2-0</RecordReference><NotificationType>03</NotificationType><RecordSourceType>01</RecordSourceType><ProductIdentifier><ProductIDType>15</ProductIDType><IDValue>978-0-9872369-2-0</IDValue></ProductIdentifier><ProductIdentifier><ProductIDType>06</ProductIDType><IDValue>10.5130/978-0-9872369-2-0</IDValue></ProductIdentifier><ProductIdentifier><ProductIDType>01</ProductIDType><IDTypeName>internal-reference</IDTypeName><IDValue>25</IDValue></ProductIdentifier><DescriptiveDetail><ProductComposition>00</ProductComposition><ProductForm>EB</ProductForm><ProductFormDetail>E107</ProductFormDetail><PrimaryContentType>10</PrimaryContentType><EpubLicense><EpubLicenseName>Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs  (CC BY-NC-ND)</EpubLicenseName><EpubLicenseExpression><EpubLicenseExpressionType>02</EpubLicenseExpressionType><EpubLicenseExpressionLink>http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/</EpubLicenseExpressionLink></EpubLicenseExpression></EpubLicense><Collection><CollectionType>10</CollectionType><CollectionIdentifier><CollectionIDType>01</CollectionIDType><IDTypeName>RUA Series ID</IDTypeName><IDValue>3</IDValue></CollectionIdentifier><TitleDetail><TitleType>01</TitleType><TitleElement><TitleElementLevel>02</TitleElementLevel><TitleText>Australian Indigenous Studies</TitleText></TitleElement></TitleDetail></Collection><TitleDetail><TitleType>01</TitleType><TitleElement><TitleElementLevel>01</TitleElementLevel><TitleText>The Politics of Identity</TitleText><Subtitle>Emerging Indigeneity</Subtitle></TitleElement></TitleDetail><Contributor><SequenceNumber>1</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Michelle Harris</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Michelle</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Harris</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Department of Sociology and Social Work Northern Arizona University</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Michelle Harris is an Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Graduate Program in the Department of Sociology and Social Work at  Northern Arizona University. Her scholarly writings have focused on several areas including acculturation and stress among immigrant Americans, how racial discrimination affects the mental health and well-being of Blacks in the United States, and the effects of sociodemographic factors and stress on the mental health of Jamaican adults. She has also published in the area of critical race theory. Dr Harris envisioned and convened the first Working Group on Emergent Identities (2009) when her research interest shifted to issues of identity construction and performance among Indigenous Peoples around the world. This edited volume is the product of scholarly conversations and papers developed and presented over the life of the Working Group.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>2</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Bronwyn Carlson</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Bronwyn</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Carlson</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts University of Wollongong</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Bronwyn Carlson is a senior lecturer in the Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts at the University of Wollongong. Bronwyn’s research focuses on a number of interrelated themes including the politics of Indigenous identity, with particular interest in what it means to identify as an Aboriginal person today focusing on what constitutes and is constitutive of Aboriginal identity in contemporary times. She was the first Indigenous person at UOW to be granted an Australian Research Council, Indigenous Discovery Grant. Her research project focuses is on how Aboriginal people represent and negotiate identity issues in the online space, more specifically in Facebook. Bronwyn is also one of the conveners of The Forum for Indigenous Research Excellence (FIRE) at the University of Wollongong.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>3</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Martin Nakata</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Martin</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Nakata</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Chair of Australian Indigenous Education University of New South Wales</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Martin Nakata is the Director of Nura Gili at the University of New South Wales. He also holds the title of Chair of Australian Indigenous Education. He is the first Torres Strait Islander to receive a PhD in Australia. His mother is an Indigenous person from the Torres Strait Islands, and his dad was born in Kushimoto-cho, Japan. His current research work focuses on higher education curriculum areas, the academic preparation of Indigenous students, and Indigenous knowledge and library services. He has presented eighteen plenary and keynote addresses at national as well as international conferences in ten countries, and published various pieces on Indigenous Australians and education in various academic journals and books in Australia and abroad. His book, Disciplining the Savages – Savaging the Disciplines, was published in 2007 by Aboriginal Studies Press.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Language><LanguageRole>01</LanguageRole><LanguageCode>eng</LanguageCode></Language><Extent><ExtentType>00</ExtentType><ExtentValue>288</ExtentValue><ExtentUnit>03</ExtentUnit></Extent><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>23</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectSchemeName>User Defined</SubjectSchemeName><SubjectCode>Sociology</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>23</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectSchemeName>User Defined</SubjectSchemeName><SubjectCode>Indigenous History</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>23</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectSchemeName>User Defined</SubjectSchemeName><SubjectCode>Colonial and Postcolonial History</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>23</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectSchemeName>User Defined</SubjectSchemeName><SubjectCode>Ethnic and multicultural studies</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>23</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectSchemeName>User Defined</SubjectSchemeName><SubjectCode>Human rights Law</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>23</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectSchemeName>User Defined</SubjectSchemeName><SubjectCode>Civil rights Law</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>12</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectCode>Indigenous identity</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>12</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectCode>Indigenous history</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>12</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectCode>Race relations</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>12</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectCode>Ethnicity and multiculturalism</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>12</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectCode>Human rights</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>12</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectCode>Civil rights</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>10</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectCode>SOC062000</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>10</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectCode>POL004000</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>10</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectCode>SOC008000</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>10</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectCode>SOC020000</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>10</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectCode>SOC050000</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>10</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectCode>POL035010</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>93</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectCode>JBSL11</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>93</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectCode>JPVH</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>93</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectCode>JBSL</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>93</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectCode>JBSL1</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>93</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectCode>JBSA</SubjectCode></Subject><Audience><AudienceCodeType>01</AudienceCodeType><AudienceCodeValue>01</AudienceCodeValue></Audience></DescriptiveDetail><CollateralDetail><TextContent><TextType>03</TextType><ContentAudience>00</ContentAudience><Text>&lt;p&gt;The issue of Indigenous identity has gained more attention in recent years from social science scholars, yet much of the discussions still centre on the politics of belonging or not belonging. While these recent discussions in part speak to the complicated and contested nature of Indigeneity, both those who claim Indigenous identity and those who write about it seem to fall into a paradox of acknowledging its complexity on the one hand, while on the other hand reifying notions of ‘tradition’ and ‘authentic cultural expression’ as core features of an Indigenous identity. Since identity theorists generally agree that who we understand ourselves to be is as much a function of the time and place in which we live as it is about who we and others say we are, this scholarship does not progress our knowledge on the contemporary characteristics of Indigenous identity formations.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt; The range of international scholars in this volume have begun an approach to the contemporary identity issues from very different perspectives, although collectively they all push the boundaries of the scholarship that relate to identities of Indigenous people in various contexts from around the world. Their essays provide at times provocative insights as the authors write about their own experiences and as they seek to answer the hard questions: Are emergent identities newly constructed identities that emerge as a function of historical moments, places, and social forces? If so, what is it that helps to forge these identities and what helps them to retain markers of Indigeneity? And what are some of the challenges (both from outside and within groups) that Indigenous individuals face as they negotiate the line between ‘authentic’ cultural expression and emergent identities? Is there anything to be learned from the ways in which these identities are performed throughout the world among Indigenous groups? Indeed why do we assume claims to multiple racial or ethnic identities limits one’s Indigenous identity? The question at the heart of our enquiry about the emerging Indigenous identities is when is it the right time to say me, us, we… them?&lt;/p&gt;</Text></TextContent><TextContent><TextType>02</TextType><ContentAudience>00</ContentAudience><Text>&lt;p&gt;The issue of Indigenous identity has gained more attention in recent years from social science scholars, yet much of the discussions still centre on the politics of belonging or not belonging. While these recent discussions in part speak to the complicated and contested nature of Indigeneity, both those who claim Indigenous identity and those who write about it seem to fall into a paradox of acknowledging its complexity on the one hand, while on the other hand reifying notions of ‘tradition’ and ‘authentic cultural expression’ as core features of an Indigenous identity. Since identity theorists generally agree that who we understand ourselves to be is as much a function of the time and place in which we live as it is about who we and others say we are, this scholarship does not progress our knowledge on the contemporary characteristics of Indigenous identity formations.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt; The range of international scholars in this volume have begun an approach to the contemporary identity issues from very different perspectives, although collectively they all push the boundaries of the scholarship that relate to identities of Indigenous people in various contexts from around the world. Their essays provide at times provocative insights as the authors write about their own experiences and as they seek to answer the hard questions: Are emergent identities newly constructed identities that emerge as a function of historical moments, places, and social forces? If so, what is it that helps to forge these identities and what helps them to retain markers of Indigeneity? And what are some of the challenges (both from outside and within groups) that Indigenous individuals face as they negotiate the line between ‘authentic’ cultural expression and emergent identities? Is there anything to be learned from the ways in which these identities are performed throughout the world among Indigenous groups? Indeed why do we assume claims to multiple racial or ethnic identities limits one’s Indigenous identity? The question at the heart of our enquiry about the emerging Indigenous identities is when is it the right time to say me, us, we… them?&lt;/p&gt;</Text></TextContent><TextContent><TextType>04</TextType><ContentAudience>00</ContentAudience><Text>Indigenous Identities and the Politics of Authenticity
Emergent Indigenous Identities: Rejecting the Need for Purity
Emergent Identities: The Changing Contours of Indigenous Identities in Aotearoa/New Zealand
On the Temporality of Indigenous Identity
Emergent Indigenous Identities at the U.S.-Mexico Borderlands
Emerging and Submerging: Ebbs, Flows, and Consistency in Expressions of Indigenous Identity
Identity Politics: Who Can Count as Indigenous?
The 'New Frontier': Emergent Indigenous Identities and Social Media
Reading Radmilla: The Semiotics of Self  (Black and Navajo)
Refusing Nostalgia: Three Indigenous Filmmakers’ Negotiations of Identity
The Lions of Lesoit: Shifting Frames of Parakuyo Maasai Indgeneity
Emerging Ethnicities and Instrumental Identities in Australia and Brazil
Resistance and Existence: North American Indigenous Humour of the 21st Century</Text></TextContent><TextContent><TextType>30</TextType><ContentAudience>00</ContentAudience><Text>&lt;p&gt;The issue of Indigenous identity has gained more attention in recent years from social science scholars, yet much of the discussions still centre on the politics of belonging or not belonging. While these recent discussions in part speak to the complicated and contested nature of Indigeneity, both those who claim Indigenous identity and those who write about it seem to fall into a paradox of acknowledging its complexity on the one hand, while on the other hand reifying notions of ‘tradition’ and ‘authentic cultural expression’ as core features of an Indigenous identity. Since identity theorists generally agree that who we understand ourselves to be is as much a function of the time and place in which we live as it is about who we and others say we are, this scholarship does not progress our knowledge on the contemporary characteristics of Indigenous identity formations.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt; The range of international scholars in this volume have begun an approach to the contemporary identity issues from very different perspectives, although collectively they all push the boundaries of the scholarship that relate to identities of Indigenous people in various contexts from around the world. Their essays provide at times provocative insights as the authors write about their own experiences and as they seek to answer the hard questions: Are emergent identities newly constructed identities that emerge as a function of historical moments, places, and social forces? If so, what is it that helps to forge these identities and what helps them to retain markers of Indigeneity? And what are some of the challenges (both from outside and within groups) that Indigenous individuals face as they negotiate the line between ‘authentic’ cultural expression and emergent identities? Is there anything to be learned from the ways in which these identities are performed throughout the world among Indigenous groups? Indeed why do we assume claims to multiple racial or ethnic identities limits one’s Indigenous identity? The question at the heart of our enquiry about the emerging Indigenous identities is when is it the right time to say me, us, we… them?&lt;/p&gt;</Text></TextContent><TextContent><TextType>20</TextType><ContentAudience>00</ContentAudience><Text>Open Access</Text></TextContent><SupportingResource><ResourceContentType>01</ResourceContentType><ContentAudience>00</ContentAudience><ResourceMode>03</ResourceMode><ResourceVersion><ResourceForm>02</ResourceForm><ResourceLink>https://storage.googleapis.com/rua-utsepress/files/media/cover_images/77a62696-2c98-4bcd-8fec-8d91839a2fdc.png</ResourceLink></ResourceVersion></SupportingResource></CollateralDetail><ContentDetail><ContentItem><LevelSequenceNumber>1</LevelSequenceNumber><TextItem><TextItemType>03</TextItemType><TextItemIdentifier><TextItemIDType>06</TextItemIDType><IDValue>10.5130/978-0-9872369-2-0.a</IDValue></TextItemIdentifier></TextItem><ComponentTypeName>Chapter</ComponentTypeName><TitleDetail><TitleType>01</TitleType><TitleElement><TitleElementLevel>01</TitleElementLevel><TitleText>Indigenous Identities and the Politics of Authenticity</TitleText></TitleElement></TitleDetail><Contributor><SequenceNumber>1</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Michelle Harris</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Michelle</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Harris</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Department of Sociology and Social Work Northern Arizona University</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Michelle Harris is an Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Graduate Program in the Department of Sociology and Social Work at  Northern Arizona University. Her scholarly writings have focused on several areas including acculturation and stress among immigrant Americans, how racial discrimination affects the mental health and well-being of Blacks in the United States, and the effects of sociodemographic factors and stress on the mental health of Jamaican adults. She has also published in the area of critical race theory. Dr Harris envisioned and convened the first Working Group on Emergent Identities (2009) when her research interest shifted to issues of identity construction and performance among Indigenous Peoples around the world. This edited volume is the product of scholarly conversations and papers developed and presented over the life of the Working Group.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>2</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Bronwyn Carlson</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Bronwyn</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Carlson</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts University of Wollongong</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Bronwyn Carlson is a senior lecturer in the Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts at the University of Wollongong. Bronwyn’s research focuses on a number of interrelated themes including the politics of Indigenous identity, with particular interest in what it means to identify as an Aboriginal person today focusing on what constitutes and is constitutive of Aboriginal identity in contemporary times. She was the first Indigenous person at UOW to be granted an Australian Research Council, Indigenous Discovery Grant. Her research project focuses is on how Aboriginal people represent and negotiate identity issues in the online space, more specifically in Facebook. Bronwyn is also one of the conveners of The Forum for Indigenous Research Excellence (FIRE) at the University of Wollongong.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>3</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Martin Nakata</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Martin</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Nakata</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Chair of Australian Indigenous Education University of New South Wales</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Martin Nakata is the Director of Nura Gili at the University of New South Wales. He also holds the title of Chair of Australian Indigenous Education. He is the first Torres Strait Islander to receive a PhD in Australia. His mother is an Indigenous person from the Torres Strait Islands, and his dad was born in Kushimoto-cho, Japan. His current research work focuses on higher education curriculum areas, the academic preparation of Indigenous students, and Indigenous knowledge and library services. He has presented eighteen plenary and keynote addresses at national as well as international conferences in ten countries, and published various pieces on Indigenous Australians and education in various academic journals and books in Australia and abroad. His book, Disciplining the Savages – Savaging the Disciplines, was published in 2007 by Aboriginal Studies Press.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Language><LanguageRole>01</LanguageRole><LanguageCode>eng</LanguageCode></Language><TextContent><TextType>20</TextType><ContentAudience>00</ContentAudience><Text>Open Access</Text></TextContent></ContentItem><ContentItem><LevelSequenceNumber>2</LevelSequenceNumber><TextItem><TextItemType>03</TextItemType><TextItemIdentifier><TextItemIDType>06</TextItemIDType><IDValue>10.5130/978-0-9872369-2-0.b</IDValue></TextItemIdentifier></TextItem><ComponentTypeName>Chapter</ComponentTypeName><TitleDetail><TitleType>01</TitleType><TitleElement><TitleElementLevel>01</TitleElementLevel><TitleText>Emergent Indigenous Identities: Rejecting the Need for Purity</TitleText></TitleElement></TitleDetail><Contributor><SequenceNumber>1</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Michelle Harris</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Michelle</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Harris</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Department of Sociology and Social Work Northern Arizona University</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Michelle Harris is an Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Graduate Program in the Department of Sociology and Social Work at  Northern Arizona University. Her scholarly writings have focused on several areas including acculturation and stress among immigrant Americans, how racial discrimination affects the mental health and well-being of Blacks in the United States, and the effects of sociodemographic factors and stress on the mental health of Jamaican adults. She has also published in the area of critical race theory. Dr Harris envisioned and convened the first Working Group on Emergent Identities (2009) when her research interest shifted to issues of identity construction and performance among Indigenous Peoples around the world. This edited volume is the product of scholarly conversations and papers developed and presented over the life of the Working Group.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>2</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Bronwyn Carlson</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Bronwyn</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Carlson</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts University of Wollongong</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Bronwyn Carlson is a senior lecturer in the Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts at the University of Wollongong. Bronwyn’s research focuses on a number of interrelated themes including the politics of Indigenous identity, with particular interest in what it means to identify as an Aboriginal person today focusing on what constitutes and is constitutive of Aboriginal identity in contemporary times. She was the first Indigenous person at UOW to be granted an Australian Research Council, Indigenous Discovery Grant. Her research project focuses is on how Aboriginal people represent and negotiate identity issues in the online space, more specifically in Facebook. Bronwyn is also one of the conveners of The Forum for Indigenous Research Excellence (FIRE) at the University of Wollongong.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>3</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Martin Nakata</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Martin</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Nakata</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Chair of Australian Indigenous Education University of New South Wales</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Martin Nakata is the Director of Nura Gili at the University of New South Wales. He also holds the title of Chair of Australian Indigenous Education. He is the first Torres Strait Islander to receive a PhD in Australia. His mother is an Indigenous person from the Torres Strait Islands, and his dad was born in Kushimoto-cho, Japan. His current research work focuses on higher education curriculum areas, the academic preparation of Indigenous students, and Indigenous knowledge and library services. He has presented eighteen plenary and keynote addresses at national as well as international conferences in ten countries, and published various pieces on Indigenous Australians and education in various academic journals and books in Australia and abroad. His book, Disciplining the Savages – Savaging the Disciplines, was published in 2007 by Aboriginal Studies Press.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Language><LanguageRole>01</LanguageRole><LanguageCode>eng</LanguageCode></Language><TextContent><TextType>20</TextType><ContentAudience>00</ContentAudience><Text>Open Access</Text></TextContent></ContentItem><ContentItem><LevelSequenceNumber>3</LevelSequenceNumber><TextItem><TextItemType>03</TextItemType><TextItemIdentifier><TextItemIDType>06</TextItemIDType><IDValue>10.5130/978-0-9872369-2-0.c</IDValue></TextItemIdentifier></TextItem><ComponentTypeName>Chapter</ComponentTypeName><TitleDetail><TitleType>01</TitleType><TitleElement><TitleElementLevel>01</TitleElementLevel><TitleText>Emergent Identities: The Changing Contours of Indigenous Identities in Aotearoa/New Zealand</TitleText></TitleElement></TitleDetail><Contributor><SequenceNumber>1</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Michelle Harris</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Michelle</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Harris</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Department of Sociology and Social Work Northern Arizona University</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Michelle Harris is an Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Graduate Program in the Department of Sociology and Social Work at  Northern Arizona University. Her scholarly writings have focused on several areas including acculturation and stress among immigrant Americans, how racial discrimination affects the mental health and well-being of Blacks in the United States, and the effects of sociodemographic factors and stress on the mental health of Jamaican adults. She has also published in the area of critical race theory. Dr Harris envisioned and convened the first Working Group on Emergent Identities (2009) when her research interest shifted to issues of identity construction and performance among Indigenous Peoples around the world. This edited volume is the product of scholarly conversations and papers developed and presented over the life of the Working Group.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>2</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Bronwyn Carlson</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Bronwyn</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Carlson</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts University of Wollongong</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Bronwyn Carlson is a senior lecturer in the Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts at the University of Wollongong. Bronwyn’s research focuses on a number of interrelated themes including the politics of Indigenous identity, with particular interest in what it means to identify as an Aboriginal person today focusing on what constitutes and is constitutive of Aboriginal identity in contemporary times. She was the first Indigenous person at UOW to be granted an Australian Research Council, Indigenous Discovery Grant. Her research project focuses is on how Aboriginal people represent and negotiate identity issues in the online space, more specifically in Facebook. Bronwyn is also one of the conveners of The Forum for Indigenous Research Excellence (FIRE) at the University of Wollongong.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>3</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Martin Nakata</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Martin</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Nakata</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Chair of Australian Indigenous Education University of New South Wales</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Martin Nakata is the Director of Nura Gili at the University of New South Wales. He also holds the title of Chair of Australian Indigenous Education. He is the first Torres Strait Islander to receive a PhD in Australia. His mother is an Indigenous person from the Torres Strait Islands, and his dad was born in Kushimoto-cho, Japan. His current research work focuses on higher education curriculum areas, the academic preparation of Indigenous students, and Indigenous knowledge and library services. He has presented eighteen plenary and keynote addresses at national as well as international conferences in ten countries, and published various pieces on Indigenous Australians and education in various academic journals and books in Australia and abroad. His book, Disciplining the Savages – Savaging the Disciplines, was published in 2007 by Aboriginal Studies Press.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Language><LanguageRole>01</LanguageRole><LanguageCode>eng</LanguageCode></Language><TextContent><TextType>20</TextType><ContentAudience>00</ContentAudience><Text>Open Access</Text></TextContent></ContentItem><ContentItem><LevelSequenceNumber>4</LevelSequenceNumber><TextItem><TextItemType>03</TextItemType><TextItemIdentifier><TextItemIDType>06</TextItemIDType><IDValue>10.5130/978-0-9872369-2-0.d</IDValue></TextItemIdentifier></TextItem><ComponentTypeName>Chapter</ComponentTypeName><TitleDetail><TitleType>01</TitleType><TitleElement><TitleElementLevel>01</TitleElementLevel><TitleText>On the Temporality of Indigenous Identity</TitleText></TitleElement></TitleDetail><Contributor><SequenceNumber>1</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Michelle Harris</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Michelle</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Harris</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Department of Sociology and Social Work Northern Arizona University</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Michelle Harris is an Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Graduate Program in the Department of Sociology and Social Work at  Northern Arizona University. Her scholarly writings have focused on several areas including acculturation and stress among immigrant Americans, how racial discrimination affects the mental health and well-being of Blacks in the United States, and the effects of sociodemographic factors and stress on the mental health of Jamaican adults. She has also published in the area of critical race theory. Dr Harris envisioned and convened the first Working Group on Emergent Identities (2009) when her research interest shifted to issues of identity construction and performance among Indigenous Peoples around the world. This edited volume is the product of scholarly conversations and papers developed and presented over the life of the Working Group.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>2</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Bronwyn Carlson</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Bronwyn</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Carlson</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts University of Wollongong</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Bronwyn Carlson is a senior lecturer in the Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts at the University of Wollongong. Bronwyn’s research focuses on a number of interrelated themes including the politics of Indigenous identity, with particular interest in what it means to identify as an Aboriginal person today focusing on what constitutes and is constitutive of Aboriginal identity in contemporary times. She was the first Indigenous person at UOW to be granted an Australian Research Council, Indigenous Discovery Grant. Her research project focuses is on how Aboriginal people represent and negotiate identity issues in the online space, more specifically in Facebook. Bronwyn is also one of the conveners of The Forum for Indigenous Research Excellence (FIRE) at the University of Wollongong.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>3</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Martin Nakata</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Martin</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Nakata</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Chair of Australian Indigenous Education University of New South Wales</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Martin Nakata is the Director of Nura Gili at the University of New South Wales. He also holds the title of Chair of Australian Indigenous Education. He is the first Torres Strait Islander to receive a PhD in Australia. His mother is an Indigenous person from the Torres Strait Islands, and his dad was born in Kushimoto-cho, Japan. His current research work focuses on higher education curriculum areas, the academic preparation of Indigenous students, and Indigenous knowledge and library services. He has presented eighteen plenary and keynote addresses at national as well as international conferences in ten countries, and published various pieces on Indigenous Australians and education in various academic journals and books in Australia and abroad. His book, Disciplining the Savages – Savaging the Disciplines, was published in 2007 by Aboriginal Studies Press.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Language><LanguageRole>01</LanguageRole><LanguageCode>eng</LanguageCode></Language><TextContent><TextType>20</TextType><ContentAudience>00</ContentAudience><Text>Open Access</Text></TextContent></ContentItem><ContentItem><LevelSequenceNumber>5</LevelSequenceNumber><TextItem><TextItemType>03</TextItemType><TextItemIdentifier><TextItemIDType>06</TextItemIDType><IDValue>10.5130/978-0-9872369-2-0.e</IDValue></TextItemIdentifier></TextItem><ComponentTypeName>Chapter</ComponentTypeName><TitleDetail><TitleType>01</TitleType><TitleElement><TitleElementLevel>01</TitleElementLevel><TitleText>Emergent Indigenous Identities at the U.S.-Mexico Borderlands</TitleText></TitleElement></TitleDetail><Contributor><SequenceNumber>1</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Michelle Harris</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Michelle</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Harris</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Department of Sociology and Social Work Northern Arizona University</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Michelle Harris is an Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Graduate Program in the Department of Sociology and Social Work at  Northern Arizona University. Her scholarly writings have focused on several areas including acculturation and stress among immigrant Americans, how racial discrimination affects the mental health and well-being of Blacks in the United States, and the effects of sociodemographic factors and stress on the mental health of Jamaican adults. She has also published in the area of critical race theory. Dr Harris envisioned and convened the first Working Group on Emergent Identities (2009) when her research interest shifted to issues of identity construction and performance among Indigenous Peoples around the world. This edited volume is the product of scholarly conversations and papers developed and presented over the life of the Working Group.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>2</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Bronwyn Carlson</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Bronwyn</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Carlson</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts University of Wollongong</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Bronwyn Carlson is a senior lecturer in the Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts at the University of Wollongong. Bronwyn’s research focuses on a number of interrelated themes including the politics of Indigenous identity, with particular interest in what it means to identify as an Aboriginal person today focusing on what constitutes and is constitutive of Aboriginal identity in contemporary times. She was the first Indigenous person at UOW to be granted an Australian Research Council, Indigenous Discovery Grant. Her research project focuses is on how Aboriginal people represent and negotiate identity issues in the online space, more specifically in Facebook. Bronwyn is also one of the conveners of The Forum for Indigenous Research Excellence (FIRE) at the University of Wollongong.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>3</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Martin Nakata</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Martin</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Nakata</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Chair of Australian Indigenous Education University of New South Wales</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Martin Nakata is the Director of Nura Gili at the University of New South Wales. He also holds the title of Chair of Australian Indigenous Education. He is the first Torres Strait Islander to receive a PhD in Australia. His mother is an Indigenous person from the Torres Strait Islands, and his dad was born in Kushimoto-cho, Japan. His current research work focuses on higher education curriculum areas, the academic preparation of Indigenous students, and Indigenous knowledge and library services. He has presented eighteen plenary and keynote addresses at national as well as international conferences in ten countries, and published various pieces on Indigenous Australians and education in various academic journals and books in Australia and abroad. His book, Disciplining the Savages – Savaging the Disciplines, was published in 2007 by Aboriginal Studies Press.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Language><LanguageRole>01</LanguageRole><LanguageCode>eng</LanguageCode></Language><TextContent><TextType>20</TextType><ContentAudience>00</ContentAudience><Text>Open Access</Text></TextContent></ContentItem><ContentItem><LevelSequenceNumber>6</LevelSequenceNumber><TextItem><TextItemType>03</TextItemType><TextItemIdentifier><TextItemIDType>06</TextItemIDType><IDValue>10.5130/978-0-9872369-2-0.f</IDValue></TextItemIdentifier></TextItem><ComponentTypeName>Chapter</ComponentTypeName><TitleDetail><TitleType>01</TitleType><TitleElement><TitleElementLevel>01</TitleElementLevel><TitleText>Emerging and Submerging: Ebbs, Flows, and Consistency in Expressions of Indigenous Identity</TitleText></TitleElement></TitleDetail><Contributor><SequenceNumber>1</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Michelle Harris</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Michelle</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Harris</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Department of Sociology and Social Work Northern Arizona University</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Michelle Harris is an Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Graduate Program in the Department of Sociology and Social Work at  Northern Arizona University. Her scholarly writings have focused on several areas including acculturation and stress among immigrant Americans, how racial discrimination affects the mental health and well-being of Blacks in the United States, and the effects of sociodemographic factors and stress on the mental health of Jamaican adults. She has also published in the area of critical race theory. Dr Harris envisioned and convened the first Working Group on Emergent Identities (2009) when her research interest shifted to issues of identity construction and performance among Indigenous Peoples around the world. This edited volume is the product of scholarly conversations and papers developed and presented over the life of the Working Group.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>2</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Bronwyn Carlson</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Bronwyn</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Carlson</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts University of Wollongong</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Bronwyn Carlson is a senior lecturer in the Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts at the University of Wollongong. Bronwyn’s research focuses on a number of interrelated themes including the politics of Indigenous identity, with particular interest in what it means to identify as an Aboriginal person today focusing on what constitutes and is constitutive of Aboriginal identity in contemporary times. She was the first Indigenous person at UOW to be granted an Australian Research Council, Indigenous Discovery Grant. Her research project focuses is on how Aboriginal people represent and negotiate identity issues in the online space, more specifically in Facebook. Bronwyn is also one of the conveners of The Forum for Indigenous Research Excellence (FIRE) at the University of Wollongong.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>3</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Martin Nakata</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Martin</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Nakata</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Chair of Australian Indigenous Education University of New South Wales</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Martin Nakata is the Director of Nura Gili at the University of New South Wales. He also holds the title of Chair of Australian Indigenous Education. He is the first Torres Strait Islander to receive a PhD in Australia. His mother is an Indigenous person from the Torres Strait Islands, and his dad was born in Kushimoto-cho, Japan. His current research work focuses on higher education curriculum areas, the academic preparation of Indigenous students, and Indigenous knowledge and library services. He has presented eighteen plenary and keynote addresses at national as well as international conferences in ten countries, and published various pieces on Indigenous Australians and education in various academic journals and books in Australia and abroad. His book, Disciplining the Savages – Savaging the Disciplines, was published in 2007 by Aboriginal Studies Press.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Language><LanguageRole>01</LanguageRole><LanguageCode>eng</LanguageCode></Language><TextContent><TextType>20</TextType><ContentAudience>00</ContentAudience><Text>Open Access</Text></TextContent></ContentItem><ContentItem><LevelSequenceNumber>7</LevelSequenceNumber><TextItem><TextItemType>03</TextItemType><TextItemIdentifier><TextItemIDType>06</TextItemIDType><IDValue>10.5130/978-0-9872369-2-0.g</IDValue></TextItemIdentifier></TextItem><ComponentTypeName>Chapter</ComponentTypeName><TitleDetail><TitleType>01</TitleType><TitleElement><TitleElementLevel>01</TitleElementLevel><TitleText>Identity Politics: Who Can Count as Indigenous?</TitleText></TitleElement></TitleDetail><Contributor><SequenceNumber>1</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Michelle Harris</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Michelle</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Harris</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Department of Sociology and Social Work Northern Arizona University</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Michelle Harris is an Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Graduate Program in the Department of Sociology and Social Work at  Northern Arizona University. Her scholarly writings have focused on several areas including acculturation and stress among immigrant Americans, how racial discrimination affects the mental health and well-being of Blacks in the United States, and the effects of sociodemographic factors and stress on the mental health of Jamaican adults. She has also published in the area of critical race theory. Dr Harris envisioned and convened the first Working Group on Emergent Identities (2009) when her research interest shifted to issues of identity construction and performance among Indigenous Peoples around the world. This edited volume is the product of scholarly conversations and papers developed and presented over the life of the Working Group.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>2</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Bronwyn Carlson</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Bronwyn</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Carlson</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts University of Wollongong</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Bronwyn Carlson is a senior lecturer in the Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts at the University of Wollongong. Bronwyn’s research focuses on a number of interrelated themes including the politics of Indigenous identity, with particular interest in what it means to identify as an Aboriginal person today focusing on what constitutes and is constitutive of Aboriginal identity in contemporary times. She was the first Indigenous person at UOW to be granted an Australian Research Council, Indigenous Discovery Grant. Her research project focuses is on how Aboriginal people represent and negotiate identity issues in the online space, more specifically in Facebook. Bronwyn is also one of the conveners of The Forum for Indigenous Research Excellence (FIRE) at the University of Wollongong.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>3</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Martin Nakata</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Martin</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Nakata</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Chair of Australian Indigenous Education University of New South Wales</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Martin Nakata is the Director of Nura Gili at the University of New South Wales. He also holds the title of Chair of Australian Indigenous Education. He is the first Torres Strait Islander to receive a PhD in Australia. His mother is an Indigenous person from the Torres Strait Islands, and his dad was born in Kushimoto-cho, Japan. His current research work focuses on higher education curriculum areas, the academic preparation of Indigenous students, and Indigenous knowledge and library services. He has presented eighteen plenary and keynote addresses at national as well as international conferences in ten countries, and published various pieces on Indigenous Australians and education in various academic journals and books in Australia and abroad. His book, Disciplining the Savages – Savaging the Disciplines, was published in 2007 by Aboriginal Studies Press.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Language><LanguageRole>01</LanguageRole><LanguageCode>eng</LanguageCode></Language><TextContent><TextType>20</TextType><ContentAudience>00</ContentAudience><Text>Open Access</Text></TextContent></ContentItem><ContentItem><LevelSequenceNumber>8</LevelSequenceNumber><TextItem><TextItemType>03</TextItemType><TextItemIdentifier><TextItemIDType>06</TextItemIDType><IDValue>10.5130/978-0-9872369-2-0.h</IDValue></TextItemIdentifier></TextItem><ComponentTypeName>Chapter</ComponentTypeName><TitleDetail><TitleType>01</TitleType><TitleElement><TitleElementLevel>01</TitleElementLevel><TitleText>The 'New Frontier': Emergent Indigenous Identities and Social Media</TitleText></TitleElement></TitleDetail><Contributor><SequenceNumber>1</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Michelle Harris</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Michelle</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Harris</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Department of Sociology and Social Work Northern Arizona University</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Michelle Harris is an Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Graduate Program in the Department of Sociology and Social Work at  Northern Arizona University. Her scholarly writings have focused on several areas including acculturation and stress among immigrant Americans, how racial discrimination affects the mental health and well-being of Blacks in the United States, and the effects of sociodemographic factors and stress on the mental health of Jamaican adults. She has also published in the area of critical race theory. Dr Harris envisioned and convened the first Working Group on Emergent Identities (2009) when her research interest shifted to issues of identity construction and performance among Indigenous Peoples around the world. This edited volume is the product of scholarly conversations and papers developed and presented over the life of the Working Group.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>2</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Bronwyn Carlson</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Bronwyn</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Carlson</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts University of Wollongong</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Bronwyn Carlson is a senior lecturer in the Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts at the University of Wollongong. Bronwyn’s research focuses on a number of interrelated themes including the politics of Indigenous identity, with particular interest in what it means to identify as an Aboriginal person today focusing on what constitutes and is constitutive of Aboriginal identity in contemporary times. She was the first Indigenous person at UOW to be granted an Australian Research Council, Indigenous Discovery Grant. Her research project focuses is on how Aboriginal people represent and negotiate identity issues in the online space, more specifically in Facebook. Bronwyn is also one of the conveners of The Forum for Indigenous Research Excellence (FIRE) at the University of Wollongong.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>3</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Martin Nakata</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Martin</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Nakata</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Chair of Australian Indigenous Education University of New South Wales</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Martin Nakata is the Director of Nura Gili at the University of New South Wales. He also holds the title of Chair of Australian Indigenous Education. He is the first Torres Strait Islander to receive a PhD in Australia. His mother is an Indigenous person from the Torres Strait Islands, and his dad was born in Kushimoto-cho, Japan. His current research work focuses on higher education curriculum areas, the academic preparation of Indigenous students, and Indigenous knowledge and library services. He has presented eighteen plenary and keynote addresses at national as well as international conferences in ten countries, and published various pieces on Indigenous Australians and education in various academic journals and books in Australia and abroad. His book, Disciplining the Savages – Savaging the Disciplines, was published in 2007 by Aboriginal Studies Press.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Language><LanguageRole>01</LanguageRole><LanguageCode>eng</LanguageCode></Language><TextContent><TextType>20</TextType><ContentAudience>00</ContentAudience><Text>Open Access</Text></TextContent></ContentItem><ContentItem><LevelSequenceNumber>9</LevelSequenceNumber><TextItem><TextItemType>03</TextItemType><TextItemIdentifier><TextItemIDType>06</TextItemIDType><IDValue>10.5130/978-0-9872369-2-0.i</IDValue></TextItemIdentifier></TextItem><ComponentTypeName>Chapter</ComponentTypeName><TitleDetail><TitleType>01</TitleType><TitleElement><TitleElementLevel>01</TitleElementLevel><TitleText>Reading Radmilla: The Semiotics of Self  (Black and Navajo)</TitleText></TitleElement></TitleDetail><Contributor><SequenceNumber>1</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Michelle Harris</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Michelle</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Harris</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Department of Sociology and Social Work Northern Arizona University</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Michelle Harris is an Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Graduate Program in the Department of Sociology and Social Work at  Northern Arizona University. Her scholarly writings have focused on several areas including acculturation and stress among immigrant Americans, how racial discrimination affects the mental health and well-being of Blacks in the United States, and the effects of sociodemographic factors and stress on the mental health of Jamaican adults. She has also published in the area of critical race theory. Dr Harris envisioned and convened the first Working Group on Emergent Identities (2009) when her research interest shifted to issues of identity construction and performance among Indigenous Peoples around the world. This edited volume is the product of scholarly conversations and papers developed and presented over the life of the Working Group.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>2</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Bronwyn Carlson</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Bronwyn</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Carlson</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts University of Wollongong</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Bronwyn Carlson is a senior lecturer in the Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts at the University of Wollongong. Bronwyn’s research focuses on a number of interrelated themes including the politics of Indigenous identity, with particular interest in what it means to identify as an Aboriginal person today focusing on what constitutes and is constitutive of Aboriginal identity in contemporary times. She was the first Indigenous person at UOW to be granted an Australian Research Council, Indigenous Discovery Grant. Her research project focuses is on how Aboriginal people represent and negotiate identity issues in the online space, more specifically in Facebook. Bronwyn is also one of the conveners of The Forum for Indigenous Research Excellence (FIRE) at the University of Wollongong.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>3</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Martin Nakata</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Martin</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Nakata</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Chair of Australian Indigenous Education University of New South Wales</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Martin Nakata is the Director of Nura Gili at the University of New South Wales. He also holds the title of Chair of Australian Indigenous Education. He is the first Torres Strait Islander to receive a PhD in Australia. His mother is an Indigenous person from the Torres Strait Islands, and his dad was born in Kushimoto-cho, Japan. His current research work focuses on higher education curriculum areas, the academic preparation of Indigenous students, and Indigenous knowledge and library services. He has presented eighteen plenary and keynote addresses at national as well as international conferences in ten countries, and published various pieces on Indigenous Australians and education in various academic journals and books in Australia and abroad. His book, Disciplining the Savages – Savaging the Disciplines, was published in 2007 by Aboriginal Studies Press.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Language><LanguageRole>01</LanguageRole><LanguageCode>eng</LanguageCode></Language><TextContent><TextType>20</TextType><ContentAudience>00</ContentAudience><Text>Open Access</Text></TextContent></ContentItem><ContentItem><LevelSequenceNumber>10</LevelSequenceNumber><TextItem><TextItemType>03</TextItemType><TextItemIdentifier><TextItemIDType>06</TextItemIDType><IDValue>10.5130/978-0-9872369-2-0.j</IDValue></TextItemIdentifier></TextItem><ComponentTypeName>Chapter</ComponentTypeName><TitleDetail><TitleType>01</TitleType><TitleElement><TitleElementLevel>01</TitleElementLevel><TitleText>Refusing Nostalgia: Three Indigenous Filmmakers’ Negotiations of Identity</TitleText></TitleElement></TitleDetail><Contributor><SequenceNumber>1</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Michelle Harris</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Michelle</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Harris</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Department of Sociology and Social Work Northern Arizona University</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Michelle Harris is an Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Graduate Program in the Department of Sociology and Social Work at  Northern Arizona University. Her scholarly writings have focused on several areas including acculturation and stress among immigrant Americans, how racial discrimination affects the mental health and well-being of Blacks in the United States, and the effects of sociodemographic factors and stress on the mental health of Jamaican adults. She has also published in the area of critical race theory. Dr Harris envisioned and convened the first Working Group on Emergent Identities (2009) when her research interest shifted to issues of identity construction and performance among Indigenous Peoples around the world. This edited volume is the product of scholarly conversations and papers developed and presented over the life of the Working Group.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>2</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Bronwyn Carlson</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Bronwyn</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Carlson</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts University of Wollongong</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Bronwyn Carlson is a senior lecturer in the Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts at the University of Wollongong. Bronwyn’s research focuses on a number of interrelated themes including the politics of Indigenous identity, with particular interest in what it means to identify as an Aboriginal person today focusing on what constitutes and is constitutive of Aboriginal identity in contemporary times. She was the first Indigenous person at UOW to be granted an Australian Research Council, Indigenous Discovery Grant. Her research project focuses is on how Aboriginal people represent and negotiate identity issues in the online space, more specifically in Facebook. Bronwyn is also one of the conveners of The Forum for Indigenous Research Excellence (FIRE) at the University of Wollongong.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>3</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Martin Nakata</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Martin</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Nakata</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Chair of Australian Indigenous Education University of New South Wales</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Martin Nakata is the Director of Nura Gili at the University of New South Wales. He also holds the title of Chair of Australian Indigenous Education. He is the first Torres Strait Islander to receive a PhD in Australia. His mother is an Indigenous person from the Torres Strait Islands, and his dad was born in Kushimoto-cho, Japan. His current research work focuses on higher education curriculum areas, the academic preparation of Indigenous students, and Indigenous knowledge and library services. He has presented eighteen plenary and keynote addresses at national as well as international conferences in ten countries, and published various pieces on Indigenous Australians and education in various academic journals and books in Australia and abroad. His book, Disciplining the Savages – Savaging the Disciplines, was published in 2007 by Aboriginal Studies Press.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Language><LanguageRole>01</LanguageRole><LanguageCode>eng</LanguageCode></Language><TextContent><TextType>20</TextType><ContentAudience>00</ContentAudience><Text>Open Access</Text></TextContent></ContentItem><ContentItem><LevelSequenceNumber>11</LevelSequenceNumber><TextItem><TextItemType>03</TextItemType><TextItemIdentifier><TextItemIDType>06</TextItemIDType><IDValue>10.5130/978-0-9872369-2-0.k</IDValue></TextItemIdentifier></TextItem><ComponentTypeName>Chapter</ComponentTypeName><TitleDetail><TitleType>01</TitleType><TitleElement><TitleElementLevel>01</TitleElementLevel><TitleText>The Lions of Lesoit: Shifting Frames of Parakuyo Maasai Indgeneity</TitleText></TitleElement></TitleDetail><Contributor><SequenceNumber>1</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Michelle Harris</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Michelle</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Harris</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Department of Sociology and Social Work Northern Arizona University</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Michelle Harris is an Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Graduate Program in the Department of Sociology and Social Work at  Northern Arizona University. Her scholarly writings have focused on several areas including acculturation and stress among immigrant Americans, how racial discrimination affects the mental health and well-being of Blacks in the United States, and the effects of sociodemographic factors and stress on the mental health of Jamaican adults. She has also published in the area of critical race theory. Dr Harris envisioned and convened the first Working Group on Emergent Identities (2009) when her research interest shifted to issues of identity construction and performance among Indigenous Peoples around the world. This edited volume is the product of scholarly conversations and papers developed and presented over the life of the Working Group.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>2</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Bronwyn Carlson</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Bronwyn</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Carlson</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts University of Wollongong</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Bronwyn Carlson is a senior lecturer in the Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts at the University of Wollongong. Bronwyn’s research focuses on a number of interrelated themes including the politics of Indigenous identity, with particular interest in what it means to identify as an Aboriginal person today focusing on what constitutes and is constitutive of Aboriginal identity in contemporary times. She was the first Indigenous person at UOW to be granted an Australian Research Council, Indigenous Discovery Grant. Her research project focuses is on how Aboriginal people represent and negotiate identity issues in the online space, more specifically in Facebook. Bronwyn is also one of the conveners of The Forum for Indigenous Research Excellence (FIRE) at the University of Wollongong.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>3</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Martin Nakata</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Martin</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Nakata</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Chair of Australian Indigenous Education University of New South Wales</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Martin Nakata is the Director of Nura Gili at the University of New South Wales. He also holds the title of Chair of Australian Indigenous Education. He is the first Torres Strait Islander to receive a PhD in Australia. His mother is an Indigenous person from the Torres Strait Islands, and his dad was born in Kushimoto-cho, Japan. His current research work focuses on higher education curriculum areas, the academic preparation of Indigenous students, and Indigenous knowledge and library services. He has presented eighteen plenary and keynote addresses at national as well as international conferences in ten countries, and published various pieces on Indigenous Australians and education in various academic journals and books in Australia and abroad. His book, Disciplining the Savages – Savaging the Disciplines, was published in 2007 by Aboriginal Studies Press.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Language><LanguageRole>01</LanguageRole><LanguageCode>eng</LanguageCode></Language><TextContent><TextType>20</TextType><ContentAudience>00</ContentAudience><Text>Open Access</Text></TextContent></ContentItem><ContentItem><LevelSequenceNumber>12</LevelSequenceNumber><TextItem><TextItemType>03</TextItemType><TextItemIdentifier><TextItemIDType>06</TextItemIDType><IDValue>10.5130/978-0-9872369-2-0.l</IDValue></TextItemIdentifier></TextItem><ComponentTypeName>Chapter</ComponentTypeName><TitleDetail><TitleType>01</TitleType><TitleElement><TitleElementLevel>01</TitleElementLevel><TitleText>Emerging Ethnicities and Instrumental Identities in Australia and Brazil</TitleText></TitleElement></TitleDetail><Contributor><SequenceNumber>1</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Michelle Harris</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Michelle</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Harris</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Department of Sociology and Social Work Northern Arizona University</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Michelle Harris is an Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Graduate Program in the Department of Sociology and Social Work at  Northern Arizona University. Her scholarly writings have focused on several areas including acculturation and stress among immigrant Americans, how racial discrimination affects the mental health and well-being of Blacks in the United States, and the effects of sociodemographic factors and stress on the mental health of Jamaican adults. She has also published in the area of critical race theory. Dr Harris envisioned and convened the first Working Group on Emergent Identities (2009) when her research interest shifted to issues of identity construction and performance among Indigenous Peoples around the world. This edited volume is the product of scholarly conversations and papers developed and presented over the life of the Working Group.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>2</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Bronwyn Carlson</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Bronwyn</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Carlson</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts University of Wollongong</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Bronwyn Carlson is a senior lecturer in the Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts at the University of Wollongong. Bronwyn’s research focuses on a number of interrelated themes including the politics of Indigenous identity, with particular interest in what it means to identify as an Aboriginal person today focusing on what constitutes and is constitutive of Aboriginal identity in contemporary times. She was the first Indigenous person at UOW to be granted an Australian Research Council, Indigenous Discovery Grant. Her research project focuses is on how Aboriginal people represent and negotiate identity issues in the online space, more specifically in Facebook. Bronwyn is also one of the conveners of The Forum for Indigenous Research Excellence (FIRE) at the University of Wollongong.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>3</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Martin Nakata</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Martin</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Nakata</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Chair of Australian Indigenous Education University of New South Wales</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Martin Nakata is the Director of Nura Gili at the University of New South Wales. He also holds the title of Chair of Australian Indigenous Education. He is the first Torres Strait Islander to receive a PhD in Australia. His mother is an Indigenous person from the Torres Strait Islands, and his dad was born in Kushimoto-cho, Japan. His current research work focuses on higher education curriculum areas, the academic preparation of Indigenous students, and Indigenous knowledge and library services. He has presented eighteen plenary and keynote addresses at national as well as international conferences in ten countries, and published various pieces on Indigenous Australians and education in various academic journals and books in Australia and abroad. His book, Disciplining the Savages – Savaging the Disciplines, was published in 2007 by Aboriginal Studies Press.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Language><LanguageRole>01</LanguageRole><LanguageCode>eng</LanguageCode></Language><TextContent><TextType>20</TextType><ContentAudience>00</ContentAudience><Text>Open Access</Text></TextContent></ContentItem><ContentItem><LevelSequenceNumber>13</LevelSequenceNumber><TextItem><TextItemType>03</TextItemType><TextItemIdentifier><TextItemIDType>06</TextItemIDType><IDValue>10.5130/978-0-9872369-2-0.m</IDValue></TextItemIdentifier></TextItem><ComponentTypeName>Chapter</ComponentTypeName><TitleDetail><TitleType>01</TitleType><TitleElement><TitleElementLevel>01</TitleElementLevel><TitleText>Resistance and Existence: North American Indigenous Humour of the 21st Century</TitleText></TitleElement></TitleDetail><Contributor><SequenceNumber>1</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Michelle Harris</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Michelle</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Harris</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Department of Sociology and Social Work Northern Arizona University</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Michelle Harris is an Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Graduate Program in the Department of Sociology and Social Work at  Northern Arizona University. Her scholarly writings have focused on several areas including acculturation and stress among immigrant Americans, how racial discrimination affects the mental health and well-being of Blacks in the United States, and the effects of sociodemographic factors and stress on the mental health of Jamaican adults. She has also published in the area of critical race theory. Dr Harris envisioned and convened the first Working Group on Emergent Identities (2009) when her research interest shifted to issues of identity construction and performance among Indigenous Peoples around the world. This edited volume is the product of scholarly conversations and papers developed and presented over the life of the Working Group.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>2</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Bronwyn Carlson</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Bronwyn</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Carlson</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts University of Wollongong</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Bronwyn Carlson is a senior lecturer in the Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts at the University of Wollongong. Bronwyn’s research focuses on a number of interrelated themes including the politics of Indigenous identity, with particular interest in what it means to identify as an Aboriginal person today focusing on what constitutes and is constitutive of Aboriginal identity in contemporary times. She was the first Indigenous person at UOW to be granted an Australian Research Council, Indigenous Discovery Grant. Her research project focuses is on how Aboriginal people represent and negotiate identity issues in the online space, more specifically in Facebook. Bronwyn is also one of the conveners of The Forum for Indigenous Research Excellence (FIRE) at the University of Wollongong.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>3</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Martin Nakata</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Martin</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Nakata</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Chair of Australian Indigenous Education University of New South Wales</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Martin Nakata is the Director of Nura Gili at the University of New South Wales. He also holds the title of Chair of Australian Indigenous Education. He is the first Torres Strait Islander to receive a PhD in Australia. His mother is an Indigenous person from the Torres Strait Islands, and his dad was born in Kushimoto-cho, Japan. His current research work focuses on higher education curriculum areas, the academic preparation of Indigenous students, and Indigenous knowledge and library services. He has presented eighteen plenary and keynote addresses at national as well as international conferences in ten countries, and published various pieces on Indigenous Australians and education in various academic journals and books in Australia and abroad. 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Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs  (CC BY-NC-ND)</EpubLicenseName><EpubLicenseExpression><EpubLicenseExpressionType>02</EpubLicenseExpressionType><EpubLicenseExpressionLink>http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/</EpubLicenseExpressionLink></EpubLicenseExpression></EpubLicense><Collection><CollectionType>10</CollectionType><CollectionIdentifier><CollectionIDType>01</CollectionIDType><IDTypeName>RUA Series ID</IDTypeName><IDValue>3</IDValue></CollectionIdentifier><TitleDetail><TitleType>01</TitleType><TitleElement><TitleElementLevel>02</TitleElementLevel><TitleText>Australian Indigenous Studies</TitleText></TitleElement></TitleDetail></Collection><TitleDetail><TitleType>01</TitleType><TitleElement><TitleElementLevel>01</TitleElementLevel><TitleText>The Politics of Identity</TitleText><Subtitle>Emerging Indigeneity</Subtitle></TitleElement></TitleDetail><Contributor><SequenceNumber>1</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Michelle Harris</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Michelle</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Harris</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Department of Sociology and Social Work Northern Arizona University</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Michelle Harris is an Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Graduate Program in the Department of Sociology and Social Work at  Northern Arizona University. Her scholarly writings have focused on several areas including acculturation and stress among immigrant Americans, how racial discrimination affects the mental health and well-being of Blacks in the United States, and the effects of sociodemographic factors and stress on the mental health of Jamaican adults. She has also published in the area of critical race theory. Dr Harris envisioned and convened the first Working Group on Emergent Identities (2009) when her research interest shifted to issues of identity construction and performance among Indigenous Peoples around the world. This edited volume is the product of scholarly conversations and papers developed and presented over the life of the Working Group.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>2</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Bronwyn Carlson</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Bronwyn</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Carlson</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts University of Wollongong</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Bronwyn Carlson is a senior lecturer in the Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts at the University of Wollongong. Bronwyn’s research focuses on a number of interrelated themes including the politics of Indigenous identity, with particular interest in what it means to identify as an Aboriginal person today focusing on what constitutes and is constitutive of Aboriginal identity in contemporary times. She was the first Indigenous person at UOW to be granted an Australian Research Council, Indigenous Discovery Grant. Her research project focuses is on how Aboriginal people represent and negotiate identity issues in the online space, more specifically in Facebook. Bronwyn is also one of the conveners of The Forum for Indigenous Research Excellence (FIRE) at the University of Wollongong.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>3</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Martin Nakata</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Martin</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Nakata</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Chair of Australian Indigenous Education University of New South Wales</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Martin Nakata is the Director of Nura Gili at the University of New South Wales. He also holds the title of Chair of Australian Indigenous Education. He is the first Torres Strait Islander to receive a PhD in Australia. His mother is an Indigenous person from the Torres Strait Islands, and his dad was born in Kushimoto-cho, Japan. His current research work focuses on higher education curriculum areas, the academic preparation of Indigenous students, and Indigenous knowledge and library services. He has presented eighteen plenary and keynote addresses at national as well as international conferences in ten countries, and published various pieces on Indigenous Australians and education in various academic journals and books in Australia and abroad. His book, Disciplining the Savages – Savaging the Disciplines, was published in 2007 by Aboriginal Studies Press.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Language><LanguageRole>01</LanguageRole><LanguageCode>eng</LanguageCode></Language><Extent><ExtentType>00</ExtentType><ExtentValue>288</ExtentValue><ExtentUnit>03</ExtentUnit></Extent><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>23</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectSchemeName>User Defined</SubjectSchemeName><SubjectCode>Sociology</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>23</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectSchemeName>User Defined</SubjectSchemeName><SubjectCode>Indigenous History</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>23</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectSchemeName>User Defined</SubjectSchemeName><SubjectCode>Colonial and Postcolonial History</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>23</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectSchemeName>User Defined</SubjectSchemeName><SubjectCode>Ethnic and multicultural studies</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>23</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectSchemeName>User Defined</SubjectSchemeName><SubjectCode>Human rights Law</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>23</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectSchemeName>User Defined</SubjectSchemeName><SubjectCode>Civil rights Law</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>12</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectCode>Indigenous identity</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>12</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectCode>Indigenous history</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>12</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectCode>Race relations</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>12</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectCode>Ethnicity and multiculturalism</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>12</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectCode>Human rights</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>12</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectCode>Civil rights</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>10</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectCode>SOC062000</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>10</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectCode>POL004000</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>10</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectCode>SOC008000</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>10</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectCode>SOC020000</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>10</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectCode>SOC050000</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>10</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectCode>POL035010</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>93</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectCode>JBSL11</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>93</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectCode>JPVH</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>93</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectCode>JBSL</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>93</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectCode>JBSL1</SubjectCode></Subject><Subject><SubjectSchemeIdentifier>93</SubjectSchemeIdentifier><SubjectCode>JBSA</SubjectCode></Subject><Audience><AudienceCodeType>01</AudienceCodeType><AudienceCodeValue>01</AudienceCodeValue></Audience></DescriptiveDetail><CollateralDetail><TextContent><TextType>03</TextType><ContentAudience>00</ContentAudience><Text>&lt;p&gt;The issue of Indigenous identity has gained more attention in recent years from social science scholars, yet much of the discussions still centre on the politics of belonging or not belonging. While these recent discussions in part speak to the complicated and contested nature of Indigeneity, both those who claim Indigenous identity and those who write about it seem to fall into a paradox of acknowledging its complexity on the one hand, while on the other hand reifying notions of ‘tradition’ and ‘authentic cultural expression’ as core features of an Indigenous identity. Since identity theorists generally agree that who we understand ourselves to be is as much a function of the time and place in which we live as it is about who we and others say we are, this scholarship does not progress our knowledge on the contemporary characteristics of Indigenous identity formations.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt; The range of international scholars in this volume have begun an approach to the contemporary identity issues from very different perspectives, although collectively they all push the boundaries of the scholarship that relate to identities of Indigenous people in various contexts from around the world. Their essays provide at times provocative insights as the authors write about their own experiences and as they seek to answer the hard questions: Are emergent identities newly constructed identities that emerge as a function of historical moments, places, and social forces? If so, what is it that helps to forge these identities and what helps them to retain markers of Indigeneity? And what are some of the challenges (both from outside and within groups) that Indigenous individuals face as they negotiate the line between ‘authentic’ cultural expression and emergent identities? Is there anything to be learned from the ways in which these identities are performed throughout the world among Indigenous groups? Indeed why do we assume claims to multiple racial or ethnic identities limits one’s Indigenous identity? The question at the heart of our enquiry about the emerging Indigenous identities is when is it the right time to say me, us, we… them?&lt;/p&gt;</Text></TextContent><TextContent><TextType>02</TextType><ContentAudience>00</ContentAudience><Text>&lt;p&gt;The issue of Indigenous identity has gained more attention in recent years from social science scholars, yet much of the discussions still centre on the politics of belonging or not belonging. While these recent discussions in part speak to the complicated and contested nature of Indigeneity, both those who claim Indigenous identity and those who write about it seem to fall into a paradox of acknowledging its complexity on the one hand, while on the other hand reifying notions of ‘tradition’ and ‘authentic cultural expression’ as core features of an Indigenous identity. Since identity theorists generally agree that who we understand ourselves to be is as much a function of the time and place in which we live as it is about who we and others say we are, this scholarship does not progress our knowledge on the contemporary characteristics of Indigenous identity formations.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt; The range of international scholars in this volume have begun an approach to the contemporary identity issues from very different perspectives, although collectively they all push the boundaries of the scholarship that relate to identities of Indigenous people in various contexts from around the world. Their essays provide at times provocative insights as the authors write about their own experiences and as they seek to answer the hard questions: Are emergent identities newly constructed identities that emerge as a function of historical moments, places, and social forces? If so, what is it that helps to forge these identities and what helps them to retain markers of Indigeneity? And what are some of the challenges (both from outside and within groups) that Indigenous individuals face as they negotiate the line between ‘authentic’ cultural expression and emergent identities? Is there anything to be learned from the ways in which these identities are performed throughout the world among Indigenous groups? Indeed why do we assume claims to multiple racial or ethnic identities limits one’s Indigenous identity? The question at the heart of our enquiry about the emerging Indigenous identities is when is it the right time to say me, us, we… them?&lt;/p&gt;</Text></TextContent><TextContent><TextType>04</TextType><ContentAudience>00</ContentAudience><Text>Indigenous Identities and the Politics of Authenticity
Emergent Indigenous Identities: Rejecting the Need for Purity
Emergent Identities: The Changing Contours of Indigenous Identities in Aotearoa/New Zealand
On the Temporality of Indigenous Identity
Emergent Indigenous Identities at the U.S.-Mexico Borderlands
Emerging and Submerging: Ebbs, Flows, and Consistency in Expressions of Indigenous Identity
Identity Politics: Who Can Count as Indigenous?
The 'New Frontier': Emergent Indigenous Identities and Social Media
Reading Radmilla: The Semiotics of Self  (Black and Navajo)
Refusing Nostalgia: Three Indigenous Filmmakers’ Negotiations of Identity
The Lions of Lesoit: Shifting Frames of Parakuyo Maasai Indgeneity
Emerging Ethnicities and Instrumental Identities in Australia and Brazil
Resistance and Existence: North American Indigenous Humour of the 21st Century</Text></TextContent><TextContent><TextType>30</TextType><ContentAudience>00</ContentAudience><Text>&lt;p&gt;The issue of Indigenous identity has gained more attention in recent years from social science scholars, yet much of the discussions still centre on the politics of belonging or not belonging. While these recent discussions in part speak to the complicated and contested nature of Indigeneity, both those who claim Indigenous identity and those who write about it seem to fall into a paradox of acknowledging its complexity on the one hand, while on the other hand reifying notions of ‘tradition’ and ‘authentic cultural expression’ as core features of an Indigenous identity. Since identity theorists generally agree that who we understand ourselves to be is as much a function of the time and place in which we live as it is about who we and others say we are, this scholarship does not progress our knowledge on the contemporary characteristics of Indigenous identity formations.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt; The range of international scholars in this volume have begun an approach to the contemporary identity issues from very different perspectives, although collectively they all push the boundaries of the scholarship that relate to identities of Indigenous people in various contexts from around the world. Their essays provide at times provocative insights as the authors write about their own experiences and as they seek to answer the hard questions: Are emergent identities newly constructed identities that emerge as a function of historical moments, places, and social forces? If so, what is it that helps to forge these identities and what helps them to retain markers of Indigeneity? And what are some of the challenges (both from outside and within groups) that Indigenous individuals face as they negotiate the line between ‘authentic’ cultural expression and emergent identities? Is there anything to be learned from the ways in which these identities are performed throughout the world among Indigenous groups? Indeed why do we assume claims to multiple racial or ethnic identities limits one’s Indigenous identity? The question at the heart of our enquiry about the emerging Indigenous identities is when is it the right time to say me, us, we… them?&lt;/p&gt;</Text></TextContent><TextContent><TextType>20</TextType><ContentAudience>00</ContentAudience><Text>Open Access</Text></TextContent><SupportingResource><ResourceContentType>01</ResourceContentType><ContentAudience>00</ContentAudience><ResourceMode>03</ResourceMode><ResourceVersion><ResourceForm>02</ResourceForm><ResourceLink>https://storage.googleapis.com/rua-utsepress/files/media/cover_images/77a62696-2c98-4bcd-8fec-8d91839a2fdc.png</ResourceLink></ResourceVersion></SupportingResource></CollateralDetail><ContentDetail><ContentItem><LevelSequenceNumber>1</LevelSequenceNumber><TextItem><TextItemType>03</TextItemType><TextItemIdentifier><TextItemIDType>06</TextItemIDType><IDValue>10.5130/978-0-9872369-2-0.a</IDValue></TextItemIdentifier></TextItem><ComponentTypeName>Chapter</ComponentTypeName><TitleDetail><TitleType>01</TitleType><TitleElement><TitleElementLevel>01</TitleElementLevel><TitleText>Indigenous Identities and the Politics of Authenticity</TitleText></TitleElement></TitleDetail><Contributor><SequenceNumber>1</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Michelle Harris</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Michelle</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Harris</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Department of Sociology and Social Work Northern Arizona University</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Michelle Harris is an Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Graduate Program in the Department of Sociology and Social Work at  Northern Arizona University. Her scholarly writings have focused on several areas including acculturation and stress among immigrant Americans, how racial discrimination affects the mental health and well-being of Blacks in the United States, and the effects of sociodemographic factors and stress on the mental health of Jamaican adults. She has also published in the area of critical race theory. Dr Harris envisioned and convened the first Working Group on Emergent Identities (2009) when her research interest shifted to issues of identity construction and performance among Indigenous Peoples around the world. 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She was the first Indigenous person at UOW to be granted an Australian Research Council, Indigenous Discovery Grant. Her research project focuses is on how Aboriginal people represent and negotiate identity issues in the online space, more specifically in Facebook. Bronwyn is also one of the conveners of The Forum for Indigenous Research Excellence (FIRE) at the University of Wollongong.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>3</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Martin Nakata</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Martin</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Nakata</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Chair of Australian Indigenous Education University of New South Wales</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Martin Nakata is the Director of Nura Gili at the University of New South Wales. He also holds the title of Chair of Australian Indigenous Education. He is the first Torres Strait Islander to receive a PhD in Australia. His mother is an Indigenous person from the Torres Strait Islands, and his dad was born in Kushimoto-cho, Japan. His current research work focuses on higher education curriculum areas, the academic preparation of Indigenous students, and Indigenous knowledge and library services. He has presented eighteen plenary and keynote addresses at national as well as international conferences in ten countries, and published various pieces on Indigenous Australians and education in various academic journals and books in Australia and abroad. 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Her scholarly writings have focused on several areas including acculturation and stress among immigrant Americans, how racial discrimination affects the mental health and well-being of Blacks in the United States, and the effects of sociodemographic factors and stress on the mental health of Jamaican adults. She has also published in the area of critical race theory. Dr Harris envisioned and convened the first Working Group on Emergent Identities (2009) when her research interest shifted to issues of identity construction and performance among Indigenous Peoples around the world. This edited volume is the product of scholarly conversations and papers developed and presented over the life of the Working Group.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>2</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Bronwyn Carlson</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Bronwyn</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Carlson</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts University of Wollongong</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Bronwyn Carlson is a senior lecturer in the Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts at the University of Wollongong. Bronwyn’s research focuses on a number of interrelated themes including the politics of Indigenous identity, with particular interest in what it means to identify as an Aboriginal person today focusing on what constitutes and is constitutive of Aboriginal identity in contemporary times. She was the first Indigenous person at UOW to be granted an Australian Research Council, Indigenous Discovery Grant. Her research project focuses is on how Aboriginal people represent and negotiate identity issues in the online space, more specifically in Facebook. Bronwyn is also one of the conveners of The Forum for Indigenous Research Excellence (FIRE) at the University of Wollongong.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>3</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Martin Nakata</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Martin</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Nakata</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Chair of Australian Indigenous Education University of New South Wales</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Martin Nakata is the Director of Nura Gili at the University of New South Wales. He also holds the title of Chair of Australian Indigenous Education. He is the first Torres Strait Islander to receive a PhD in Australia. His mother is an Indigenous person from the Torres Strait Islands, and his dad was born in Kushimoto-cho, Japan. His current research work focuses on higher education curriculum areas, the academic preparation of Indigenous students, and Indigenous knowledge and library services. He has presented eighteen plenary and keynote addresses at national as well as international conferences in ten countries, and published various pieces on Indigenous Australians and education in various academic journals and books in Australia and abroad. 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Her scholarly writings have focused on several areas including acculturation and stress among immigrant Americans, how racial discrimination affects the mental health and well-being of Blacks in the United States, and the effects of sociodemographic factors and stress on the mental health of Jamaican adults. She has also published in the area of critical race theory. Dr Harris envisioned and convened the first Working Group on Emergent Identities (2009) when her research interest shifted to issues of identity construction and performance among Indigenous Peoples around the world. 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She was the first Indigenous person at UOW to be granted an Australian Research Council, Indigenous Discovery Grant. Her research project focuses is on how Aboriginal people represent and negotiate identity issues in the online space, more specifically in Facebook. Bronwyn is also one of the conveners of The Forum for Indigenous Research Excellence (FIRE) at the University of Wollongong.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>3</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Martin Nakata</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Martin</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Nakata</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Chair of Australian Indigenous Education University of New South Wales</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Martin Nakata is the Director of Nura Gili at the University of New South Wales. He also holds the title of Chair of Australian Indigenous Education. He is the first Torres Strait Islander to receive a PhD in Australia. His mother is an Indigenous person from the Torres Strait Islands, and his dad was born in Kushimoto-cho, Japan. His current research work focuses on higher education curriculum areas, the academic preparation of Indigenous students, and Indigenous knowledge and library services. He has presented eighteen plenary and keynote addresses at national as well as international conferences in ten countries, and published various pieces on Indigenous Australians and education in various academic journals and books in Australia and abroad. His book, Disciplining the Savages – Savaging the Disciplines, was published in 2007 by Aboriginal Studies Press.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Language><LanguageRole>01</LanguageRole><LanguageCode>eng</LanguageCode></Language><TextContent><TextType>20</TextType><ContentAudience>00</ContentAudience><Text>Open Access</Text></TextContent></ContentItem><ContentItem><LevelSequenceNumber>4</LevelSequenceNumber><TextItem><TextItemType>03</TextItemType><TextItemIdentifier><TextItemIDType>06</TextItemIDType><IDValue>10.5130/978-0-9872369-2-0.d</IDValue></TextItemIdentifier></TextItem><ComponentTypeName>Chapter</ComponentTypeName><TitleDetail><TitleType>01</TitleType><TitleElement><TitleElementLevel>01</TitleElementLevel><TitleText>On the Temporality of Indigenous Identity</TitleText></TitleElement></TitleDetail><Contributor><SequenceNumber>1</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Michelle Harris</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Michelle</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Harris</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Department of Sociology and Social Work Northern Arizona University</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Michelle Harris is an Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Graduate Program in the Department of Sociology and Social Work at  Northern Arizona University. Her scholarly writings have focused on several areas including acculturation and stress among immigrant Americans, how racial discrimination affects the mental health and well-being of Blacks in the United States, and the effects of sociodemographic factors and stress on the mental health of Jamaican adults. She has also published in the area of critical race theory. Dr Harris envisioned and convened the first Working Group on Emergent Identities (2009) when her research interest shifted to issues of identity construction and performance among Indigenous Peoples around the world. This edited volume is the product of scholarly conversations and papers developed and presented over the life of the Working Group.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>2</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Bronwyn Carlson</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Bronwyn</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Carlson</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts University of Wollongong</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Bronwyn Carlson is a senior lecturer in the Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts at the University of Wollongong. Bronwyn’s research focuses on a number of interrelated themes including the politics of Indigenous identity, with particular interest in what it means to identify as an Aboriginal person today focusing on what constitutes and is constitutive of Aboriginal identity in contemporary times. She was the first Indigenous person at UOW to be granted an Australian Research Council, Indigenous Discovery Grant. Her research project focuses is on how Aboriginal people represent and negotiate identity issues in the online space, more specifically in Facebook. Bronwyn is also one of the conveners of The Forum for Indigenous Research Excellence (FIRE) at the University of Wollongong.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>3</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Martin Nakata</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Martin</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Nakata</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Chair of Australian Indigenous Education University of New South Wales</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Martin Nakata is the Director of Nura Gili at the University of New South Wales. He also holds the title of Chair of Australian Indigenous Education. He is the first Torres Strait Islander to receive a PhD in Australia. His mother is an Indigenous person from the Torres Strait Islands, and his dad was born in Kushimoto-cho, Japan. His current research work focuses on higher education curriculum areas, the academic preparation of Indigenous students, and Indigenous knowledge and library services. He has presented eighteen plenary and keynote addresses at national as well as international conferences in ten countries, and published various pieces on Indigenous Australians and education in various academic journals and books in Australia and abroad. His book, Disciplining the Savages – Savaging the Disciplines, was published in 2007 by Aboriginal Studies Press.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Language><LanguageRole>01</LanguageRole><LanguageCode>eng</LanguageCode></Language><TextContent><TextType>20</TextType><ContentAudience>00</ContentAudience><Text>Open Access</Text></TextContent></ContentItem><ContentItem><LevelSequenceNumber>5</LevelSequenceNumber><TextItem><TextItemType>03</TextItemType><TextItemIdentifier><TextItemIDType>06</TextItemIDType><IDValue>10.5130/978-0-9872369-2-0.e</IDValue></TextItemIdentifier></TextItem><ComponentTypeName>Chapter</ComponentTypeName><TitleDetail><TitleType>01</TitleType><TitleElement><TitleElementLevel>01</TitleElementLevel><TitleText>Emergent Indigenous Identities at the U.S.-Mexico Borderlands</TitleText></TitleElement></TitleDetail><Contributor><SequenceNumber>1</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Michelle Harris</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Michelle</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Harris</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Department of Sociology and Social Work Northern Arizona University</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Michelle Harris is an Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Graduate Program in the Department of Sociology and Social Work at  Northern Arizona University. Her scholarly writings have focused on several areas including acculturation and stress among immigrant Americans, how racial discrimination affects the mental health and well-being of Blacks in the United States, and the effects of sociodemographic factors and stress on the mental health of Jamaican adults. She has also published in the area of critical race theory. Dr Harris envisioned and convened the first Working Group on Emergent Identities (2009) when her research interest shifted to issues of identity construction and performance among Indigenous Peoples around the world. This edited volume is the product of scholarly conversations and papers developed and presented over the life of the Working Group.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>2</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Bronwyn Carlson</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Bronwyn</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Carlson</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts University of Wollongong</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Bronwyn Carlson is a senior lecturer in the Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts at the University of Wollongong. Bronwyn’s research focuses on a number of interrelated themes including the politics of Indigenous identity, with particular interest in what it means to identify as an Aboriginal person today focusing on what constitutes and is constitutive of Aboriginal identity in contemporary times. She was the first Indigenous person at UOW to be granted an Australian Research Council, Indigenous Discovery Grant. Her research project focuses is on how Aboriginal people represent and negotiate identity issues in the online space, more specifically in Facebook. Bronwyn is also one of the conveners of The Forum for Indigenous Research Excellence (FIRE) at the University of Wollongong.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>3</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Martin Nakata</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Martin</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Nakata</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Chair of Australian Indigenous Education University of New South Wales</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Martin Nakata is the Director of Nura Gili at the University of New South Wales. He also holds the title of Chair of Australian Indigenous Education. He is the first Torres Strait Islander to receive a PhD in Australia. His mother is an Indigenous person from the Torres Strait Islands, and his dad was born in Kushimoto-cho, Japan. His current research work focuses on higher education curriculum areas, the academic preparation of Indigenous students, and Indigenous knowledge and library services. He has presented eighteen plenary and keynote addresses at national as well as international conferences in ten countries, and published various pieces on Indigenous Australians and education in various academic journals and books in Australia and abroad. His book, Disciplining the Savages – Savaging the Disciplines, was published in 2007 by Aboriginal Studies Press.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Language><LanguageRole>01</LanguageRole><LanguageCode>eng</LanguageCode></Language><TextContent><TextType>20</TextType><ContentAudience>00</ContentAudience><Text>Open Access</Text></TextContent></ContentItem><ContentItem><LevelSequenceNumber>6</LevelSequenceNumber><TextItem><TextItemType>03</TextItemType><TextItemIdentifier><TextItemIDType>06</TextItemIDType><IDValue>10.5130/978-0-9872369-2-0.f</IDValue></TextItemIdentifier></TextItem><ComponentTypeName>Chapter</ComponentTypeName><TitleDetail><TitleType>01</TitleType><TitleElement><TitleElementLevel>01</TitleElementLevel><TitleText>Emerging and Submerging: Ebbs, Flows, and Consistency in Expressions of Indigenous Identity</TitleText></TitleElement></TitleDetail><Contributor><SequenceNumber>1</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Michelle Harris</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Michelle</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Harris</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Department of Sociology and Social Work Northern Arizona University</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Michelle Harris is an Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Graduate Program in the Department of Sociology and Social Work at  Northern Arizona University. Her scholarly writings have focused on several areas including acculturation and stress among immigrant Americans, how racial discrimination affects the mental health and well-being of Blacks in the United States, and the effects of sociodemographic factors and stress on the mental health of Jamaican adults. She has also published in the area of critical race theory. Dr Harris envisioned and convened the first Working Group on Emergent Identities (2009) when her research interest shifted to issues of identity construction and performance among Indigenous Peoples around the world. This edited volume is the product of scholarly conversations and papers developed and presented over the life of the Working Group.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>2</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Bronwyn Carlson</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Bronwyn</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Carlson</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts University of Wollongong</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Bronwyn Carlson is a senior lecturer in the Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts at the University of Wollongong. Bronwyn’s research focuses on a number of interrelated themes including the politics of Indigenous identity, with particular interest in what it means to identify as an Aboriginal person today focusing on what constitutes and is constitutive of Aboriginal identity in contemporary times. She was the first Indigenous person at UOW to be granted an Australian Research Council, Indigenous Discovery Grant. Her research project focuses is on how Aboriginal people represent and negotiate identity issues in the online space, more specifically in Facebook. Bronwyn is also one of the conveners of The Forum for Indigenous Research Excellence (FIRE) at the University of Wollongong.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>3</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Martin Nakata</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Martin</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Nakata</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Chair of Australian Indigenous Education University of New South Wales</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Martin Nakata is the Director of Nura Gili at the University of New South Wales. He also holds the title of Chair of Australian Indigenous Education. He is the first Torres Strait Islander to receive a PhD in Australia. His mother is an Indigenous person from the Torres Strait Islands, and his dad was born in Kushimoto-cho, Japan. His current research work focuses on higher education curriculum areas, the academic preparation of Indigenous students, and Indigenous knowledge and library services. He has presented eighteen plenary and keynote addresses at national as well as international conferences in ten countries, and published various pieces on Indigenous Australians and education in various academic journals and books in Australia and abroad. His book, Disciplining the Savages – Savaging the Disciplines, was published in 2007 by Aboriginal Studies Press.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Language><LanguageRole>01</LanguageRole><LanguageCode>eng</LanguageCode></Language><TextContent><TextType>20</TextType><ContentAudience>00</ContentAudience><Text>Open Access</Text></TextContent></ContentItem><ContentItem><LevelSequenceNumber>7</LevelSequenceNumber><TextItem><TextItemType>03</TextItemType><TextItemIdentifier><TextItemIDType>06</TextItemIDType><IDValue>10.5130/978-0-9872369-2-0.g</IDValue></TextItemIdentifier></TextItem><ComponentTypeName>Chapter</ComponentTypeName><TitleDetail><TitleType>01</TitleType><TitleElement><TitleElementLevel>01</TitleElementLevel><TitleText>Identity Politics: Who Can Count as Indigenous?</TitleText></TitleElement></TitleDetail><Contributor><SequenceNumber>1</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Michelle Harris</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Michelle</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Harris</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Department of Sociology and Social Work Northern Arizona University</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Michelle Harris is an Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Graduate Program in the Department of Sociology and Social Work at  Northern Arizona University. Her scholarly writings have focused on several areas including acculturation and stress among immigrant Americans, how racial discrimination affects the mental health and well-being of Blacks in the United States, and the effects of sociodemographic factors and stress on the mental health of Jamaican adults. She has also published in the area of critical race theory. Dr Harris envisioned and convened the first Working Group on Emergent Identities (2009) when her research interest shifted to issues of identity construction and performance among Indigenous Peoples around the world. This edited volume is the product of scholarly conversations and papers developed and presented over the life of the Working Group.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>2</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Bronwyn Carlson</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Bronwyn</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Carlson</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts University of Wollongong</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Bronwyn Carlson is a senior lecturer in the Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts at the University of Wollongong. Bronwyn’s research focuses on a number of interrelated themes including the politics of Indigenous identity, with particular interest in what it means to identify as an Aboriginal person today focusing on what constitutes and is constitutive of Aboriginal identity in contemporary times. She was the first Indigenous person at UOW to be granted an Australian Research Council, Indigenous Discovery Grant. Her research project focuses is on how Aboriginal people represent and negotiate identity issues in the online space, more specifically in Facebook. Bronwyn is also one of the conveners of The Forum for Indigenous Research Excellence (FIRE) at the University of Wollongong.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>3</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Martin Nakata</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Martin</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Nakata</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Chair of Australian Indigenous Education University of New South Wales</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Martin Nakata is the Director of Nura Gili at the University of New South Wales. He also holds the title of Chair of Australian Indigenous Education. He is the first Torres Strait Islander to receive a PhD in Australia. His mother is an Indigenous person from the Torres Strait Islands, and his dad was born in Kushimoto-cho, Japan. His current research work focuses on higher education curriculum areas, the academic preparation of Indigenous students, and Indigenous knowledge and library services. He has presented eighteen plenary and keynote addresses at national as well as international conferences in ten countries, and published various pieces on Indigenous Australians and education in various academic journals and books in Australia and abroad. His book, Disciplining the Savages – Savaging the Disciplines, was published in 2007 by Aboriginal Studies Press.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Language><LanguageRole>01</LanguageRole><LanguageCode>eng</LanguageCode></Language><TextContent><TextType>20</TextType><ContentAudience>00</ContentAudience><Text>Open Access</Text></TextContent></ContentItem><ContentItem><LevelSequenceNumber>8</LevelSequenceNumber><TextItem><TextItemType>03</TextItemType><TextItemIdentifier><TextItemIDType>06</TextItemIDType><IDValue>10.5130/978-0-9872369-2-0.h</IDValue></TextItemIdentifier></TextItem><ComponentTypeName>Chapter</ComponentTypeName><TitleDetail><TitleType>01</TitleType><TitleElement><TitleElementLevel>01</TitleElementLevel><TitleText>The 'New Frontier': Emergent Indigenous Identities and Social Media</TitleText></TitleElement></TitleDetail><Contributor><SequenceNumber>1</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Michelle Harris</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Michelle</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Harris</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Department of Sociology and Social Work Northern Arizona University</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Michelle Harris is an Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Graduate Program in the Department of Sociology and Social Work at  Northern Arizona University. Her scholarly writings have focused on several areas including acculturation and stress among immigrant Americans, how racial discrimination affects the mental health and well-being of Blacks in the United States, and the effects of sociodemographic factors and stress on the mental health of Jamaican adults. She has also published in the area of critical race theory. Dr Harris envisioned and convened the first Working Group on Emergent Identities (2009) when her research interest shifted to issues of identity construction and performance among Indigenous Peoples around the world. This edited volume is the product of scholarly conversations and papers developed and presented over the life of the Working Group.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>2</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Bronwyn Carlson</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Bronwyn</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Carlson</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts University of Wollongong</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Bronwyn Carlson is a senior lecturer in the Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts at the University of Wollongong. Bronwyn’s research focuses on a number of interrelated themes including the politics of Indigenous identity, with particular interest in what it means to identify as an Aboriginal person today focusing on what constitutes and is constitutive of Aboriginal identity in contemporary times. She was the first Indigenous person at UOW to be granted an Australian Research Council, Indigenous Discovery Grant. Her research project focuses is on how Aboriginal people represent and negotiate identity issues in the online space, more specifically in Facebook. Bronwyn is also one of the conveners of The Forum for Indigenous Research Excellence (FIRE) at the University of Wollongong.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>3</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Martin Nakata</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Martin</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Nakata</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Chair of Australian Indigenous Education University of New South Wales</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Martin Nakata is the Director of Nura Gili at the University of New South Wales. He also holds the title of Chair of Australian Indigenous Education. He is the first Torres Strait Islander to receive a PhD in Australia. His mother is an Indigenous person from the Torres Strait Islands, and his dad was born in Kushimoto-cho, Japan. His current research work focuses on higher education curriculum areas, the academic preparation of Indigenous students, and Indigenous knowledge and library services. He has presented eighteen plenary and keynote addresses at national as well as international conferences in ten countries, and published various pieces on Indigenous Australians and education in various academic journals and books in Australia and abroad. His book, Disciplining the Savages – Savaging the Disciplines, was published in 2007 by Aboriginal Studies Press.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Language><LanguageRole>01</LanguageRole><LanguageCode>eng</LanguageCode></Language><TextContent><TextType>20</TextType><ContentAudience>00</ContentAudience><Text>Open Access</Text></TextContent></ContentItem><ContentItem><LevelSequenceNumber>9</LevelSequenceNumber><TextItem><TextItemType>03</TextItemType><TextItemIdentifier><TextItemIDType>06</TextItemIDType><IDValue>10.5130/978-0-9872369-2-0.i</IDValue></TextItemIdentifier></TextItem><ComponentTypeName>Chapter</ComponentTypeName><TitleDetail><TitleType>01</TitleType><TitleElement><TitleElementLevel>01</TitleElementLevel><TitleText>Reading Radmilla: The Semiotics of Self  (Black and Navajo)</TitleText></TitleElement></TitleDetail><Contributor><SequenceNumber>1</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Michelle Harris</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Michelle</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Harris</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Department of Sociology and Social Work Northern Arizona University</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Michelle Harris is an Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Graduate Program in the Department of Sociology and Social Work at  Northern Arizona University. Her scholarly writings have focused on several areas including acculturation and stress among immigrant Americans, how racial discrimination affects the mental health and well-being of Blacks in the United States, and the effects of sociodemographic factors and stress on the mental health of Jamaican adults. She has also published in the area of critical race theory. Dr Harris envisioned and convened the first Working Group on Emergent Identities (2009) when her research interest shifted to issues of identity construction and performance among Indigenous Peoples around the world. This edited volume is the product of scholarly conversations and papers developed and presented over the life of the Working Group.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>2</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Bronwyn Carlson</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Bronwyn</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Carlson</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts University of Wollongong</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Bronwyn Carlson is a senior lecturer in the Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts at the University of Wollongong. Bronwyn’s research focuses on a number of interrelated themes including the politics of Indigenous identity, with particular interest in what it means to identify as an Aboriginal person today focusing on what constitutes and is constitutive of Aboriginal identity in contemporary times. She was the first Indigenous person at UOW to be granted an Australian Research Council, Indigenous Discovery Grant. Her research project focuses is on how Aboriginal people represent and negotiate identity issues in the online space, more specifically in Facebook. Bronwyn is also one of the conveners of The Forum for Indigenous Research Excellence (FIRE) at the University of Wollongong.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>3</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Martin Nakata</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Martin</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Nakata</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Chair of Australian Indigenous Education University of New South Wales</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Martin Nakata is the Director of Nura Gili at the University of New South Wales. He also holds the title of Chair of Australian Indigenous Education. He is the first Torres Strait Islander to receive a PhD in Australia. His mother is an Indigenous person from the Torres Strait Islands, and his dad was born in Kushimoto-cho, Japan. His current research work focuses on higher education curriculum areas, the academic preparation of Indigenous students, and Indigenous knowledge and library services. He has presented eighteen plenary and keynote addresses at national as well as international conferences in ten countries, and published various pieces on Indigenous Australians and education in various academic journals and books in Australia and abroad. His book, Disciplining the Savages – Savaging the Disciplines, was published in 2007 by Aboriginal Studies Press.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Language><LanguageRole>01</LanguageRole><LanguageCode>eng</LanguageCode></Language><TextContent><TextType>20</TextType><ContentAudience>00</ContentAudience><Text>Open Access</Text></TextContent></ContentItem><ContentItem><LevelSequenceNumber>10</LevelSequenceNumber><TextItem><TextItemType>03</TextItemType><TextItemIdentifier><TextItemIDType>06</TextItemIDType><IDValue>10.5130/978-0-9872369-2-0.j</IDValue></TextItemIdentifier></TextItem><ComponentTypeName>Chapter</ComponentTypeName><TitleDetail><TitleType>01</TitleType><TitleElement><TitleElementLevel>01</TitleElementLevel><TitleText>Refusing Nostalgia: Three Indigenous Filmmakers’ Negotiations of Identity</TitleText></TitleElement></TitleDetail><Contributor><SequenceNumber>1</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Michelle Harris</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Michelle</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Harris</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Department of Sociology and Social Work Northern Arizona University</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Michelle Harris is an Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Graduate Program in the Department of Sociology and Social Work at  Northern Arizona University. Her scholarly writings have focused on several areas including acculturation and stress among immigrant Americans, how racial discrimination affects the mental health and well-being of Blacks in the United States, and the effects of sociodemographic factors and stress on the mental health of Jamaican adults. She has also published in the area of critical race theory. Dr Harris envisioned and convened the first Working Group on Emergent Identities (2009) when her research interest shifted to issues of identity construction and performance among Indigenous Peoples around the world. This edited volume is the product of scholarly conversations and papers developed and presented over the life of the Working Group.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>2</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Bronwyn Carlson</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Bronwyn</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Carlson</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts University of Wollongong</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Bronwyn Carlson is a senior lecturer in the Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts at the University of Wollongong. Bronwyn’s research focuses on a number of interrelated themes including the politics of Indigenous identity, with particular interest in what it means to identify as an Aboriginal person today focusing on what constitutes and is constitutive of Aboriginal identity in contemporary times. She was the first Indigenous person at UOW to be granted an Australian Research Council, Indigenous Discovery Grant. Her research project focuses is on how Aboriginal people represent and negotiate identity issues in the online space, more specifically in Facebook. Bronwyn is also one of the conveners of The Forum for Indigenous Research Excellence (FIRE) at the University of Wollongong.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>3</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Martin Nakata</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Martin</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Nakata</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Chair of Australian Indigenous Education University of New South Wales</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Martin Nakata is the Director of Nura Gili at the University of New South Wales. He also holds the title of Chair of Australian Indigenous Education. He is the first Torres Strait Islander to receive a PhD in Australia. His mother is an Indigenous person from the Torres Strait Islands, and his dad was born in Kushimoto-cho, Japan. His current research work focuses on higher education curriculum areas, the academic preparation of Indigenous students, and Indigenous knowledge and library services. He has presented eighteen plenary and keynote addresses at national as well as international conferences in ten countries, and published various pieces on Indigenous Australians and education in various academic journals and books in Australia and abroad. His book, Disciplining the Savages – Savaging the Disciplines, was published in 2007 by Aboriginal Studies Press.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Language><LanguageRole>01</LanguageRole><LanguageCode>eng</LanguageCode></Language><TextContent><TextType>20</TextType><ContentAudience>00</ContentAudience><Text>Open Access</Text></TextContent></ContentItem><ContentItem><LevelSequenceNumber>11</LevelSequenceNumber><TextItem><TextItemType>03</TextItemType><TextItemIdentifier><TextItemIDType>06</TextItemIDType><IDValue>10.5130/978-0-9872369-2-0.k</IDValue></TextItemIdentifier></TextItem><ComponentTypeName>Chapter</ComponentTypeName><TitleDetail><TitleType>01</TitleType><TitleElement><TitleElementLevel>01</TitleElementLevel><TitleText>The Lions of Lesoit: Shifting Frames of Parakuyo Maasai Indgeneity</TitleText></TitleElement></TitleDetail><Contributor><SequenceNumber>1</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Michelle Harris</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Michelle</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Harris</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Department of Sociology and Social Work Northern Arizona University</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Michelle Harris is an Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Graduate Program in the Department of Sociology and Social Work at  Northern Arizona University. Her scholarly writings have focused on several areas including acculturation and stress among immigrant Americans, how racial discrimination affects the mental health and well-being of Blacks in the United States, and the effects of sociodemographic factors and stress on the mental health of Jamaican adults. She has also published in the area of critical race theory. Dr Harris envisioned and convened the first Working Group on Emergent Identities (2009) when her research interest shifted to issues of identity construction and performance among Indigenous Peoples around the world. This edited volume is the product of scholarly conversations and papers developed and presented over the life of the Working Group.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>2</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Bronwyn Carlson</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Bronwyn</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Carlson</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts University of Wollongong</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Bronwyn Carlson is a senior lecturer in the Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts at the University of Wollongong. Bronwyn’s research focuses on a number of interrelated themes including the politics of Indigenous identity, with particular interest in what it means to identify as an Aboriginal person today focusing on what constitutes and is constitutive of Aboriginal identity in contemporary times. She was the first Indigenous person at UOW to be granted an Australian Research Council, Indigenous Discovery Grant. Her research project focuses is on how Aboriginal people represent and negotiate identity issues in the online space, more specifically in Facebook. Bronwyn is also one of the conveners of The Forum for Indigenous Research Excellence (FIRE) at the University of Wollongong.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>3</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Martin Nakata</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Martin</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Nakata</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Chair of Australian Indigenous Education University of New South Wales</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Martin Nakata is the Director of Nura Gili at the University of New South Wales. He also holds the title of Chair of Australian Indigenous Education. He is the first Torres Strait Islander to receive a PhD in Australia. His mother is an Indigenous person from the Torres Strait Islands, and his dad was born in Kushimoto-cho, Japan. His current research work focuses on higher education curriculum areas, the academic preparation of Indigenous students, and Indigenous knowledge and library services. He has presented eighteen plenary and keynote addresses at national as well as international conferences in ten countries, and published various pieces on Indigenous Australians and education in various academic journals and books in Australia and abroad. His book, Disciplining the Savages – Savaging the Disciplines, was published in 2007 by Aboriginal Studies Press.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Language><LanguageRole>01</LanguageRole><LanguageCode>eng</LanguageCode></Language><TextContent><TextType>20</TextType><ContentAudience>00</ContentAudience><Text>Open Access</Text></TextContent></ContentItem><ContentItem><LevelSequenceNumber>12</LevelSequenceNumber><TextItem><TextItemType>03</TextItemType><TextItemIdentifier><TextItemIDType>06</TextItemIDType><IDValue>10.5130/978-0-9872369-2-0.l</IDValue></TextItemIdentifier></TextItem><ComponentTypeName>Chapter</ComponentTypeName><TitleDetail><TitleType>01</TitleType><TitleElement><TitleElementLevel>01</TitleElementLevel><TitleText>Emerging Ethnicities and Instrumental Identities in Australia and Brazil</TitleText></TitleElement></TitleDetail><Contributor><SequenceNumber>1</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Michelle Harris</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Michelle</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Harris</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Department of Sociology and Social Work Northern Arizona University</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Michelle Harris is an Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Graduate Program in the Department of Sociology and Social Work at  Northern Arizona University. Her scholarly writings have focused on several areas including acculturation and stress among immigrant Americans, how racial discrimination affects the mental health and well-being of Blacks in the United States, and the effects of sociodemographic factors and stress on the mental health of Jamaican adults. She has also published in the area of critical race theory. Dr Harris envisioned and convened the first Working Group on Emergent Identities (2009) when her research interest shifted to issues of identity construction and performance among Indigenous Peoples around the world. This edited volume is the product of scholarly conversations and papers developed and presented over the life of the Working Group.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>2</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Bronwyn Carlson</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Bronwyn</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Carlson</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts University of Wollongong</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Bronwyn Carlson is a senior lecturer in the Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts at the University of Wollongong. Bronwyn’s research focuses on a number of interrelated themes including the politics of Indigenous identity, with particular interest in what it means to identify as an Aboriginal person today focusing on what constitutes and is constitutive of Aboriginal identity in contemporary times. She was the first Indigenous person at UOW to be granted an Australian Research Council, Indigenous Discovery Grant. Her research project focuses is on how Aboriginal people represent and negotiate identity issues in the online space, more specifically in Facebook. Bronwyn is also one of the conveners of The Forum for Indigenous Research Excellence (FIRE) at the University of Wollongong.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>3</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Martin Nakata</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Martin</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Nakata</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Chair of Australian Indigenous Education University of New South Wales</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Martin Nakata is the Director of Nura Gili at the University of New South Wales. He also holds the title of Chair of Australian Indigenous Education. He is the first Torres Strait Islander to receive a PhD in Australia. His mother is an Indigenous person from the Torres Strait Islands, and his dad was born in Kushimoto-cho, Japan. His current research work focuses on higher education curriculum areas, the academic preparation of Indigenous students, and Indigenous knowledge and library services. He has presented eighteen plenary and keynote addresses at national as well as international conferences in ten countries, and published various pieces on Indigenous Australians and education in various academic journals and books in Australia and abroad. His book, Disciplining the Savages – Savaging the Disciplines, was published in 2007 by Aboriginal Studies Press.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Language><LanguageRole>01</LanguageRole><LanguageCode>eng</LanguageCode></Language><TextContent><TextType>20</TextType><ContentAudience>00</ContentAudience><Text>Open Access</Text></TextContent></ContentItem><ContentItem><LevelSequenceNumber>13</LevelSequenceNumber><TextItem><TextItemType>03</TextItemType><TextItemIdentifier><TextItemIDType>06</TextItemIDType><IDValue>10.5130/978-0-9872369-2-0.m</IDValue></TextItemIdentifier></TextItem><ComponentTypeName>Chapter</ComponentTypeName><TitleDetail><TitleType>01</TitleType><TitleElement><TitleElementLevel>01</TitleElementLevel><TitleText>Resistance and Existence: North American Indigenous Humour of the 21st Century</TitleText></TitleElement></TitleDetail><Contributor><SequenceNumber>1</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Michelle Harris</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Michelle</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Harris</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Department of Sociology and Social Work Northern Arizona University</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Michelle Harris is an Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Graduate Program in the Department of Sociology and Social Work at  Northern Arizona University. Her scholarly writings have focused on several areas including acculturation and stress among immigrant Americans, how racial discrimination affects the mental health and well-being of Blacks in the United States, and the effects of sociodemographic factors and stress on the mental health of Jamaican adults. She has also published in the area of critical race theory. Dr Harris envisioned and convened the first Working Group on Emergent Identities (2009) when her research interest shifted to issues of identity construction and performance among Indigenous Peoples around the world. This edited volume is the product of scholarly conversations and papers developed and presented over the life of the Working Group.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>2</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Bronwyn Carlson</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Bronwyn</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Carlson</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts University of Wollongong</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Bronwyn Carlson is a senior lecturer in the Indigenous Studies Unit, Faculty of Law, Humanities and Arts at the University of Wollongong. Bronwyn’s research focuses on a number of interrelated themes including the politics of Indigenous identity, with particular interest in what it means to identify as an Aboriginal person today focusing on what constitutes and is constitutive of Aboriginal identity in contemporary times. She was the first Indigenous person at UOW to be granted an Australian Research Council, Indigenous Discovery Grant. Her research project focuses is on how Aboriginal people represent and negotiate identity issues in the online space, more specifically in Facebook. Bronwyn is also one of the conveners of The Forum for Indigenous Research Excellence (FIRE) at the University of Wollongong.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Contributor><SequenceNumber>3</SequenceNumber><ContributorRole>B01</ContributorRole><PersonName>Martin Nakata</PersonName><NamesBeforeKey>Martin</NamesBeforeKey><KeyNames>Nakata</KeyNames><ProfessionalAffiliation><Affiliation>Chair of Australian Indigenous Education University of New South Wales</Affiliation></ProfessionalAffiliation><BiographicalNote>Martin Nakata is the Director of Nura Gili at the University of New South Wales. He also holds the title of Chair of Australian Indigenous Education. He is the first Torres Strait Islander to receive a PhD in Australia. His mother is an Indigenous person from the Torres Strait Islands, and his dad was born in Kushimoto-cho, Japan. His current research work focuses on higher education curriculum areas, the academic preparation of Indigenous students, and Indigenous knowledge and library services. He has presented eighteen plenary and keynote addresses at national as well as international conferences in ten countries, and published various pieces on Indigenous Australians and education in various academic journals and books in Australia and abroad. His book, Disciplining the Savages – Savaging the Disciplines, was published in 2007 by Aboriginal Studies Press.</BiographicalNote></Contributor><Language><LanguageRole>01</LanguageRole><LanguageCode>eng</LanguageCode></Language><TextContent><TextType>20</TextType><ContentAudience>00</ContentAudience><Text>Open Access</Text></TextContent></ContentItem></ContentDetail><PublishingDetail><Imprint><ImprintIdentifier><ImprintIDType>01</ImprintIDType><IDTypeName>URL</IDTypeName><IDValue>https://utsepress.lib.uts.edu.au</IDValue></ImprintIdentifier><ImprintName>UTS ePRESS</ImprintName></Imprint><Publisher><PublishingRole>01</PublishingRole><PublisherName>UTS ePRESS</PublisherName><Website><WebsiteRole>01</WebsiteRole><WebsiteDescription>Publisher’s corporate website</WebsiteDescription><WebsiteLink>https://utsepress.lib.uts.edu.au</WebsiteLink></Website><Website><WebsiteRole>02</WebsiteRole><WebsiteDescription>Publisher’s website for a specified work</WebsiteDescription><WebsiteLink>https://utsepress.lib.uts.edu.au/books/e/10.5130/978-0-9872369-2-0</WebsiteLink></Website></Publisher><CityOfPublication>Sydney</CityOfPublication><PublishingStatus>04</PublishingStatus><PublishingDate><PublishingDateRole>01</PublishingDateRole><Date dateformat="00">20130101</Date></PublishingDate><CopyrightStatement><CopyrightOwner><PersonName>The Author(s)</PersonName></CopyrightOwner></CopyrightStatement><SalesRights><SalesRightsType>02</SalesRightsType><Territory><RegionsIncluded>WORLD</RegionsIncluded></Territory></SalesRights></PublishingDetail><RelatedMaterial /><ProductSupply><Market><Territory><RegionsIncluded>WORLD</RegionsIncluded></Territory></Market><SupplyDetail><Supplier><SupplierRole>11</SupplierRole><SupplierName>Unknown</SupplierName></Supplier><ProductAvailability>20</ProductAvailability><SupplyDate><SupplyDateRole>08</SupplyDateRole><Date dateformat="00">20130101</Date></SupplyDate><UnpricedItemType>08</UnpricedItemType></SupplyDetail></ProductSupply></Product></ONIXMessage>