“It is time to join our circle!” Watch Georgia Birks and Danièle Hromek yarn about the many ways non-Indigenous designers and built environment professionals can forge genuine and enduring relationships with Country.
Get started by reading the session description below and watching the trailer – Didjarigura, that’s enough – Danièle invites others to join in.
preview
Please log in to your account to purchase access to the full recording, or to use a code. If you do not have an account, you can register here.
1 formal point on completion of the CPD questions.
Refer to the Learning Objectives for Deadly Djurumin Yarns.
Purchase access to the full recording via Vimeo on demand below (+ CPD).
Didjarigura, that’s enough – Danièle invites others to join in.
Join our circle – what non-Indigenous designers can do
The opportunities of designing with Country are beyond what any of us can imagine at this moment in time. At the very least, designing with Country means design of this continent – and of each place – that does no harm to Country, culture, or the people of Country.
Ideally, every built environment professional would aspire to build genuine and enduring relationships with Country, community and culture to enable them to design with Country. Without such relationships, there is a great risk that built environment professionals will only appropriate culture. This is a pressing matter, as practitioners balance new regulatory requirements and cultural and moral imperatives with ever-present pressures of projects and practice.
The big question is “How do we do it?!” Georgia Birks and Danièle Hromek have been working on a dossier in Architecture Australia that responds to this question. It aims to provide insight and examples of how built environment professionals can respond genuinely to Country and First Nations cultures, while also meeting their obligations in terms of regulation and government guidelines.
In this yarn Georgia and Danièle discuss the dossier, its contents, the critical ideas behind it, and the authors – all of whom bring long-term aspirations to make a lasting difference to the health and wellbeing of Country, and have a positive impact on the future of culture and, of course, First Nations peoples.
Access the full recording
Purchase access to the full video via our Vimeo on demand channel or via the button on the top right corner of the video above.
- $38 Parlour Collective (use the promo code Collective at the Vimeo checkout).
- $50 General
- $11 Concession (anyone who needs it – students, those not working etc – use the promo code Concession at the Vimeo checkout)
We operate on an honesty system – select the ticket type that aligns with your circumstances. If you haven’t yet joined the Parlour Collective, join now to access discount pricing and many other benefits, and to support Parlour’s ongoing work!
Proceeds above the costs of delivering the DD Yarns program support the work of Deadly Djurumin. If you represent an Aboriginal organisation please contact Parlour to obtain access at no cost.
CPD
One hour of formal CPD on completion of the CPD questions. See here for the Learning Objectives for the series as a whole.
Once the questions are completed, you will receive an email from Google forms with your responses. Please keep this – it provides the evidence of attendance and completion. Please note, separate CPD certificates will not be issued. If you can’t find the email, remember to check your spam folder and whitelist parlour@parlour.org.au in your email system.
This session was recorded live on 2 June 2023. The Deadly Djurumin Yarns are a collaboration between Parlour and Deadly Djurumin.