Events

2024 Events

5th April: International Students Meet and Greet

This event is for the School of Social Sciences International students to come together to network and make new friend. Meet their teaching colleagues and some of the services the university offers to International students.

1PSQ  Conference Rooms 1 and 2. Registration required.

Contact Teddy Nagaddya for further details.  t.nagaddya@westernsydney.edu.au

12th April: Social Work Workshops with Charles Sturt

These workshops are a joint venture between WSU and Charles Sturt universities.

Contact Litea Sewabu for further details. l.meo-sewabu@westernsydney.edu.au

17th April: Religion & Society Online Seminar Series 2024 - Toby Miles Johnson presenting

Religion & Society Online Seminar Series 2024

Third Wednesday of the month at 12 - 1pm

Convened by Prof Cristina Rocha & Dr Kathleen Openshaw

17th April 12-1pm on Zoom

Discretionary Policing: Following religious beliefs or operational guidelines, decision-making, and citizen engagement.

Associate Professor Toby Miles-Johnson (WSU)

Abstract

In an Australian context, there is little research which examines whether officers following a religion will place religious ideologies beyond professional guidelines and whether there are differences between religious and non-religious officers regarding decision-making and use of discretion. This raises questions about how religious and non-religious officers will engage with citizens whose identities may be similar to, or different from the responding officer, and, whether the citizen’s identity challenges an officer’s religious ideologies; thereby shaping police-citizen interaction. Whether religious or non-religious police officers are more likely to police equitably is an area of research that needs systematic enquiry; especially given that officers who are religious could apply discretional policing when adhering to religious beliefs or practices during decision-making, and, conversely, officers who are non-religious, could apply discretional adherence to organizational rules, regulations, and police training. As such, this preliminary, exploratory study sought to address this gap in knowledge. Analysing data collected from a sample of officers (N = 1425) working in one Australian police organization, this study provides insight into how religious or non-religious beliefs shapes officers’ discretional decision-making, and citizen engagement.

Associate Professor Toby Miles-Johnson (WSU) specialises in research with police organisations, national security agencies, international defence agencies, and diverse groups of people, and people categorised as vulnerable or hard to reach. Toby is interested in how institutions such as police and other national/international security agencies respond to and engage with all citizens when experiencing victimisation or when professional engagement occurs. He is the current ‘Chair of the Policing Group’ within the Australian and New Zealand Society of Criminology.

RSVP: Please register by 12th of April for zoom link on

https://events.humanitix.com/discretionary-policing-following-religious-beliefs-or-operational-guidelines-decision-making-and-citizen-engagement-toby-miles-johnson-wsu

22nd April: SAGR Workshop "Gender and/or Queer research in progress workshop" - open to all

This workshop is hosted by SaGR (Sexualities and Genders Research) and the Queer Cultures Research Program (Institute for Culture and Society) at Western Sydney University. The organisers are: Assoc Prof Lucy Nicholas, Assoc Prof Ben Hanckel, Prof. Mary Lou Rasmussen (ANU), and Prof. Susanne Gannon

The aim of the workshop is for sexualities and genders scholars to workshop their work-in-progress ideas. The workshop will be followed by lunch and a seminar with visiting scholar Dr And Pasley

Who is this for?

The event is open to researchers from all career stages (masters students to professors! Inside and outside of universities). We are inviting you to come along and share a work-in-progress idea on any gender and/or sexuality research – very widely defined - and discuss with other gender/queer-focused scholars.

What is required?

Each attendee will be asked to share 1 powerpoint slide about their work in progress idea. This will detail an issue you are working through: it may be writing, methodological, theoretical, ethical, philosophical. We will share these and then in smaller groups (by theme) discuss and share ideas.

When and where is it on?

Date: Monday April 22nd 2024 Time: 10-12:30pm.

Location: PC-01.9.10 (Conf 1). WSU Parramatta city campus

Note: There is no cost. Lunch is provided, and the lunch will be followed by a SaGR seminar with visiting scholar Dr And Pasley

For catering purposes please RSVP in an email by 5pm on Thurs 18th April to Dr Alison Guo at A.Guo3@westernsydney.edu.au

Please share this email with any people or groups who may be interested

Lucy

Associate Professor Lucy Nicholas

Director, Sexualities and Genders ResearchSchool of Social Sciences

7th May: Workshop "Pitching a book proposal"

Professor Linda Briskman is coordinating, details to come.

22nd May: Religion & Society Online Seminar Series 2024 - Prof Mark Hutchinson presenting

Religion & Society Online Seminar Series 2024

Third Wednesday of the month at 12 - 1pm

Convened by Prof Cristina Rocha & Dr Kathleen Openshaw

22 May, 12-1pm on Zoom

Title: ‘Complexifying the view from the North: global Italians and religious flows.’

Abstract:

The standard North Atlantic view of European religion is one which starts in the Middle East, engages the Graeco-Roman world, zooms in on Catholic expansion and then forgets about that in the desire to tell the story of religious wars and rising Protestant ‘recentering’, goes to the Americas and the spreads throughout the world. There have been numerous attempts to improve upon this view – for example, in accounts of reverse missions from the Majority World--but its entrenching in the various enlightenment and nineteenth century nationalist historiographies (which emerged coterminously with the rise of professional history writing in the academies of the global north) have generally meant that this basic theme has been carried even into attempts to write global histories. Common to those who have sought to relocate the story away from the North Atlantic axis has been the discovery that they need to start elsewhere. Is there, for instance, an alternative story of the Reformation which might help in this? An alternative story for the engagement of Protestantism with liberal national states, for global circulation which is not centred on the imperialism/ colonialism/ post-colonialism straitjacket, for the rise of modern new religious forms and flows? As it happens, yes. This paper reflects on a large, multi-year project on the global history of Italian Protestantism – the first volume of which will be published by Brill in 2025, and the second in 2026. Involving over 60 scholars who mainly publish in Italian, these two volumes trace the pre-history through the lens of the debated origins of the medieval Waldenses and the engagement of medieval heresies in Protestant literature, the geographical, social and political spread (and exile of) Italian protestant reformation, the role of inquisition and censorship, the contribution of Libertinism and religious critiques to Enlightenment and dissent, transnational networks such as freemasonry and liberal republicanism, the Napoleonic excursus, the rise of the new European nation states, and the second and third globalizations of Italian migration and Protestantization, Italian Modernism, Pentecostalism and the rise of global catholic charismatic renewal. What it demonstrates is that, when one takes the standard model, turns it upside down, and reads it through the texts and experiences of another language and the largest single national people movement in modern history, the story of European religion no longer quite looks the same.

Short Bio

Prof Mark Hutchinson is an intellectual historian who has specialized for many years in the history of higher education and the historiography of migration and new religious movements. He is currently University Historian at Western Sydney University, and he sits on a variety of international boards and committees in his field. Among his publications are the Cambridge Short History of Global Evangelicalism, volume V: Global Themes, in the Oxford History of Protestant Dissenting Movements, the first and (soon the second) histories of Western Sydney University, and many others. With Maria Benedetti, Paolo Zanini and Gianclaudio Civale of the Universita’ degli Studi di Milano, his two volume Global History of Italian Protestantism will emerge in 2025 and 2026.

RSVP: Please register by 17th of May for zoom link on https://events.humanitix.com/complexifying-the-view-from-the-north-global-italians-and-religious-flows-mark-hutchinson-wsu

29th May: SAGR "Quantitative methods in genders and sexualities research"

1PSQ 3pm

Details to follow

27th June: IAMCR Pre-conference Workshop - hosted by HADRI in collaboration with colleagues in ICS and the School of HCA

C A L L   F O R   A B S T R A C T S
I A M C R   P R E - C O N F E R E N C E
C O MM U N I C A T I O N  A S    C O - C R E A T I O N –
C O L L A B O R A T I V E    E X P R E S S I O N    T H R O U G H    E N G A G E D    M E D I A    P R A C T I C E

IAMCR Conference’s theme of ‘weaving people together’ places emphasis on the power arising from people working in unison towards a shared goal. When mediated communication is built on common traits, the differences that may exist in multicultural contexts can be superseded. It follows that communication can also be regarded as a project in the hands, and influenced by the will, of the communicators.
The work and role of communicators as engaged media practitioners or community mobilisers is morphing continually. It has close resemblance at times to the curator, the designer, the information visualiser, the social and behaviour change promoter or the data scientist. The co-creative impulse is now to ask, how can we effectively communicate our narrative? Who/what are the sources that legitimise this narrative? What media formats will best serve its meanings?What networks will sustain the audience/participants across the communicative project? And how do we ensure the project’s viability for both communicators and audiences?

The driving ideas of this Pre-Conference are rooted in these notions. When communication is no longer perceived as a mere exchange and becomes in truth an act of co-creation, possibilities for a media practice that arise from listening and collaboration emerge. Within this landscape, different forms of engagement with and between communicators give rise to processes of collaborative expression that aim not only at creating a shared understanding, but also at producing a weave of narratives or at advocating for meaningful changes. This novel communicative texture invites collaboration from and between multiple actors, including community media outlets, participatory media initiatives, non-governmental organisations, indigenous groups, climate activists, journalists, humanitarian workers, rights advocates, academics and gender campaigners.
From these ideas, we invite submissions that address topics, theories, case studies and initiatives related, but not exclusive, to participatory communication, communication for development and social change, alternative media, media development, media literacies, environmental communication and the politics of the Anthropocene. If you are interested in participating in this event, please submit a 200-300 word abstract to Valentina Baú at
v.bau@westernsydney.edu.au Abstracts must include a title, author/s name, affiliation, and contact details.
Submissions are due by 17th March 2024.

Pre-conference details:
Western Sydney University, Parramatta City Campus, Peter Shergold Building
161-169 Macquarie St, Parramatta NSW 2150 Thursday 27th June 2024
8:30 AM – 5 PM

30th June: WSU Open Day

WSU Open Day will be held at Parramatta South Campus

Great opportunity for prospective students and their families to visit our campus and received program information, come and meet and speak with our Academics and ask questions.

Sunday 30th June.

10am to 4pm

Events Archive


2023 Past Events

Art Therapy Student Exhibition 2023

2nd August: The Disability Studies Group

The Disability Studies SoSS Research Collaboration (SRC) would like to invite those interested in Disability Studies to attend our first reading group on 6 April 2023, from 1 - 3pm at the Parramatta City Campus. The reading group will be the first event held by the newly formed Disability
Studies Research Collaboration, in what we hope will be the start of a prolonged collaborative engagement with disability studies and politics, and particularly between HDRs and their academic colleagues.

Location: 1PSQ (room and time tbc)
Contact: Dr Ryan Thorneycroft for more information  r.thorneycroft@westernsydney.edu.au

2nd August: Professor Karen Soldatic Professorial Lecture

Karen Soldatic, Professor, School of Social Sciences, Deputy Director of Research, Institute for Culture and Society, Western Sydney University and Institute Fellow, Whitlam Institute. She was awarded a Fogarty Foundation Excellence in Education Fellowship for 2006–2009, a British Academy International Fellowship in 2012, a fellowship at The Centre for Human Rights Education at Curtin University (2011–2012), and an Australian Research Council DECRA Fellowship (2016–2019). Her research on global welfare regimes builds on her 20 years of experience as an international (Cambodia, Sri Lanka, Indonesia), national and state-based senior policy analyst, researcher and educator. She obtained her PhD (Distinction - summa cum laude equiv.) in 2010 from the University of Western Australia.

Date: 2nd August (after the School of Social Sciences School Meeting)
Time:
tbc
Location: Parramatta South Campus - room tbc
Register: tbc

8th August: Policy Workshop with Dr. Vafa Ghazavi

How can I have public policy impact? A workshop for academic researchers at WSU.

Presented by Dr. Vafa Ghazavi, Executive Director, Research and Policy, James Martin Institute for Public Policy

Date: 8th August
Time:
10:30am to 11:30am
Location: ZOOM (register for the link)
Register: https://www.eventbrite.com.au/e/wsu-policy-workshop-how-can-i-have-public-policy-impact-tickets-662756341057

21st August: Lunchtime seminar – Humanitarianism and Migration

Lunchtime seminar with School of Social Sciences and Australian Red Cross (research on migrants and trust

Date: 21st August
Time:
10:00am to 2:00pm
Location: 1PSQ, Level 9, Conference Room 3
Register:  tbc

2nd July: Open Day

Social Sciences will have staff available for all our disciplines to speak with prospective students and their parents.
There will also be VR display, Criminology Scavenger Hunt and our Tourism staff will be giving Historical Tours of the campus.
Date: Sunday 2nd July
Time: 10am to 4pmLocation: Parramatta South Campus, Building EE

4th July: SoSS HDR Drop in Day

Meet and greet sessions for our new and current Higher Degree Research candidates and Master of Research Students.

Date: 4th July
Time:
10am to 4pm
Location: 1PSQ Level 9 conference room space 
Register: soss-hdr@westernsydney.edu.au
Contact: Chantelle Young soss-hdr@westernsydney.edu.au

5th July: The Disability Studies Group

The Disability Studies SoSS Research Collaboration (SRC) would like to invite those interested in Disability Studies to attend our first reading group on 6 April 2023, from 1 - 3pm at the Parramatta City Campus. The reading group will be the first event held by the newly formed Disability Studies Research Collaboration, in what we hope will be the start of a prolonged collaborative engagement with disability studies and politics, and particularly between HDRs and their academic colleagues.

Location: 1PSQ (room and time tbc)
Contact: Dr Ryan Thorneycroft for more information  r.thorneycroft@westernsydney.edu.au

9th to 22nd: ISUSW

International Summer University in Social Work.
This event will have delegates from many international universities visit for a 2 week residential Summer School to be held at Hawkesbury Campus.

10th to 14th July: RESEARCH WEEK

Details to be confirmed

18th July: Spring Orientation

Social Sciences will have staff available for all our disciplines to welcome and meet with our new students commencing in Spring. Location: Parramatta South Campus, Building EEa
Commencing at 1pm

1st June: Rosemary Kariuki living a joyful life, her way: African Women Leadership in Our Local Communities

What a great opportunity on this important day to remind you of an event with 2021 Australian Local Hero of the Year Rosemary Kariuki OAM.

The event is an opportunity to celebrate African women leadership in Australia, and the publication of Rosemary’s fabulous memoir "A Joyful Life".Please see flyer attached for event exciting program.

Rosemary Kariuki living a joyful life, her way: African Women Leadership in Our Local Communities

Date: 1st of June 2023
Time: 16:00 – 18:30
Venue: PC-01.9.29 (Conf 4) 1PSQ, Parramatta City Campus, Western Sydney University
Registration: Places are limited so please RSVP to me (K.Openshaw@westernsydney.edu.au)

6th June: CRP: Author Meets Readers

The Challenging Racism Project Author Meets Readers Series
Date: Tuesday, 6 June
Time:11:00am-12:00pm
Location: Held via Zoom
Registration:  Link will be available at registration (details to be advised)
Contact: Dr Ryan Thorneycroft for more information  r.thorneycroft@westernsydney.edu.au

7th June: 3 Minute Thesis - School Round

Three Minute Thesis (3MT) is an international competition where HDR candidates have the opportunity to present their research thesis to a general audience in three minutes using just one slide. The 3MT develops academic, presentation and research communication skills, while developing research candidates’ ability to effectively explain their research in language appropriate to a non-specialist audience.

9th June: External Advisory Committee Meeting for Heritage and Tourism

Heritage and Tourism Team in Social Sciences will host the External Advisory Committee Meeting for Heritage and Tourism with guest from industry partners and the tourism sector.
Date: 9 June
Time: 9:00am-5:00pm
Location: Female Orphan School  (Building EZ.1.57)
Contact: Dr Garth Lean for more information g.lean@westernsydney.edu.au

20th June: Advocacy Brief, Media Art and Stories: a case for funding research into community-based creative arts practices in Western Sydney

Media Art and Stories, is an ongoing series of events chaired by Assoc. Prof. Nichole Georgeou and  Dr. Valentina Baú.
There next event is at: 
Date: 20th June
Time: 3pm to 4.30pm
Location: 1PSQ, Level 9, Conference Room 2 
Contact: n.georgeou@westernsydney.edu.au for further details

21st June: The Disability Studies Group

The Disability Studies SoSS Research Collaboration (SRC) would like to invite those interested in Disability Studies to attend our first reading group on 6 April 2023, from 1 - 3pm at the Parramatta City Campus. The reading group will be the first event held by the newly formed Disability Studies Research Collaboration, in what we hope will be the start of a prolonged collaborative engagement with disability studies and politics, and particularly between HDRs and their academic colleagues.

Date: 21st June
Time: 1pm to 2.30pm
Location: 1PSQ, PC-01.5.39 (LS)  - this event is also offered via Zoom, link given at registration.
Registration: Register through Eventbrite for zoom link
https://www.eventbrite.com.au/e/the-disability-studies-soss-research-collaboration-src-june-meeting-tickets-
642587064207

28th June: SoSS Indigenous Learning and Teaching Showcase

This year’s showcase will centre on the theme 'From Histories, to the Voice and Beyond: Intricate Conversations in the Classroom' by Indigenous and non-Indigenous academic staff.
Introduction:      A/Professor Corrinne Sullivan
Presenters:         Doctor Kathleen Openshaw, Doctor Anna Leditschke and A/Professor Sandra Phillips
Discussant:         Professor Susan Page

Date: Wednesday 28 June
Time: 1pm
Location: Webinar 
Registration: https://uws.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_bfAnTBU1TSqugxRFGSAYxg#/registration

International Student Meet ups

International Student Meet ups are for students to network with each other and their peers and teachers. (students who register and attend receive a Drink/snack voucher)

10th May  - Parramatta South Campus, Room EA.1.21

20th May - Parramatta South Campus, Room EA.1.21

23rd May - Parramatta South Campus 1PSQ, Room 01.5.29

29th May - Liverpool Campus, Room 3.8.01

Contact: Dr Kate Linklater k.linklater@westernsydney.edu.au for further details.

16th May: Challenging Racism Program

CRP: Author Meets Readers Series via Zoom

18th May

Disability Indigenous Justice International Community Forum

20th May

Fairfield Area Command - Police Engagement Day (Saturday)

Fairfield Showground

28th May: Challenging Racism Program
31st May: SaGR Webinar

SaGR Webinar "Methods and ethical dilemmas in genders and sexualities research panel and discussion" 3pm to 5pm

2022 Past Events

2022 Social Sciences Week

5th September 2022 10:30 am - 12:00 pm AEST   (in person –  Parramatta City Campus - 1PSQ 01.2.26)

Indigenous Activism in Humanities and Social Science Research   (opens in a new window)

This event explores how Indigenous social science and humanities scholars engage in activism research and how academics could better advocate for Indigenous communities.
Presenters include Dr BJ Newton (keynote), Associate Professor Corrinne Sullivan and Robyn Newitt.  Chaired by Associate Professor Corrinne Sullivan and Associate Professor Kate Huppatz.

5th September 2022 1:00 pm - 3:00 pm AEST   (Zoom)

WSU: Anthropology and Filming our Social Worlds (opens in a new window)

Ethnographic film-making has long been a medium for ethnographic analysis in Anthropology. In this panel for Social Sciences Week 2022, Anthropology @ Western Sydney University presents a film by Dr Malini Sur (ICS, SoSS) entitled Life Cycle that offers a tribute to the bicycle in uncertain times and its relationship to rapidly changing Indian cities. The film maker will discuss the making of the film and is joined by a panel of discussants in a conversation about the challenges and opportunities of ethnographic film making Panellists: Mary Hawkins, Cristina Rocha, Andrew McWilliam, Kathleen Openshaw and Helena Onnudottir Film Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z_y0rxaO7T8&t=10s Life Cycle (42 Minutes) explores the place of the bicycle in the everyday lives of city dwellers in Kolkata. Are Kolkata's bicycles relics of a past to be hastily discarded or are they viable, if complicated cargo vehicles in India’s burgeoning cities? Winding through Kolkata’s roads we follow the city’s daily wage-workers, teachers and environmentalists and their changing relationships to cycling. What happens when new traffic regulations impede two-wheeled travellers from riding on Kolkata’s roads? How do vendors, couriers, newspaper sellers and artists negotiate Kolkata’s roads congested with cars and other motorized transport? Who wins the battle for the road – the bicycle or the car?

8th September 2022 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm AEST   (Zoom)

Racialised Pandemic: establishing a community-research agenda (opens in a new window)

Racism associated with the COVID-19 pandemic has disproportionally affected certain groups in Australia, for example Indigenous, Asian, Muslim and migrant communities (Kamp et al. 2021; Elias et al. 2021). The pandemic has highlighted the impact of structural racism in public health emergencies as evident in disparities in exposure, susceptibility and treatment of the novel coronavirus along racial lines (Yearby & Mohapatra 2020). Furthermore, public health measures adopted to mitigate the spread of the virus in NSW were also uneven. This disparity was particularly evident in Western Sydney, home to the largest Indigenous, Muslim and migrant communities in Sydney, which saw some of the strictest and longest lockdown regulations, received the most COVID-related fines, and saw a heightened police and enforcement presence that was not evident in other parts of Sydney. Western Sydney has been subjected to racial logics of inequality as a result of negative COVID-related impacts on employment, income, access to appropriate public health messaging, and mobility, as well as exposure to the virus and related deaths. Elias et al. (2020) talk of the “multidimensional nature of racism”, where those “who already face numerous social, economic and health vulnerabilities” also encountered intensified marginalisation and exclusion during the pandemic. The aim of this panel is to centre the communities that experienced racism and to draw on the social sciences to discuss a community-research agenda for addressing the problem of racism generated by the pandemic and broader continuing inequality in Western Sydney. Looking at the multidimensional nature of racism, specifically, structural racism, from an interdisciplinary perspective, we will draw on geography, sociology, social work and law, in order to respond to the needs of the communities who experience racism.

2022 Art Therapy Student Exhibition

Please use the link below to visit a digital version of this year's Integrating Arts & Therapy exhibition by first year students in the M. Art Therapy.

2022 Art Therapy Exhibition

To navigate around the exhibition, click on the screen with your mouse and hold it down, you can then move the page around to see left, right, up, down, or to turn around and go back. Click on the white arrows in the black circles to view works or to move from space to space - clicking on the red cross in the red and white circle will open up the artist statement.

A floorplan is provided below to assist.

Art Therapy Exhibition Floorplan

Art Therapy Exhibition 2022

Exhibition: Felt Edge — Whitlam Institute

Our Art Therapy Exhibition - Felt Edge: social justice in contemporary art and therapy, opens today (23 February) at the Margaret Whitlam Galleries. This Exhibition is co-curated by Joy Paton and sessional staff member Anita Lever.

Note: Margaret Whitlam Galleries is open to the public on Wednesdays and Thursdays. This exhibition comprises artworks by staff, students and graduates of the Art Therapy program at Western Sydney University. www.whitlam.org

https://www.whitlam.org/events/2022/2/8/exhibition-felt-edge

Felt Edge

2021 Past Events

Integrating Arts + Therapy Student Exhibition 2021

This group exhibition showcases artwork projects by Master of Art Therapy students in the subject Integrating Arts and Therapy.

Drawing on concepts from contemporary art and theories of materiality, each work speaks to an aspect of art therapy of interest to the artist/trainee art therapist.

22nd November - 31st December 2021 online here.  

Download the flyer.

For further information, please contact
Dr. Joy Paton, joy.paton@westernsydney.edu.au

2021 Social Sciences Week

6th September 3PM-4:30PM
Championing the humanities and social sciences in education: research, policy and partnerships (opens in a new window)

7th September 10AM-11:30AM Tourism, vector, virus: Managing tourism and public health in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic (opens in a new window)

7th September 12PM-1:30PM
Micro-chips, big pharma, 5G, the virus escaped the lab: the conspiracy theories and misinformation of COVID-19 (opens in a new window)

7th September 2PM-4PM
Muslim women's narratives and representations: Creative methodologies and expressions for Social Justice (opens in a new window)

8th September 10AM-11:30AM
Researching automated worlds (opens in a new window)

8th September 2PM-3:30PM
People, heat, dust and the stars: Social Science at the extremities (opens in a new window)

9th September 10AM-11:30AM
Sociology and disability justice: Transforming our world (opens in a new window)

10th September 10AM-12PM
Critical race theory: Transforming disciplinary knowledge in humanities and social sciences (HASS)

For full details on each event and how to register or attend, download the Western Sydney University Social Sciences Week flyer (PDF, 1973.24 KB) . (opens in a new window)

Integrating Arts + Therapy Student Exhibition 2020

This group exhibition showcases artwork projects by Master of Art Therapy students in the subject Integrating Arts and Therapy.

Drawing on concepts from contemporary art and theories of materiality, each work speaks to an aspect of art therapy of interest to the artist/trainee art therapist.

The physical exhibition can be viewed at the Parramatta South Campus, Lower Ground, Science Building (EHa). You can also visit the exhibition online, via a 360 degree virtual tour.(opens in a new window)

Student videos:
Morgana Thomas - Clay
Jams Yau - Free Hong Kong

For further information, please contact
Dr. Joy Paton, joy.paton@westernsydney.edu.au
or Anita Lever, a.lever@westernsydney.edu.au