Prejudice Mob: All References

Rita Afsar [email protected].  Sulaiman-Hill, C.M.R, Thompson, S.C., Afsar, R., & Hodliffe, T.L. (2011). Changing images of refugees: A comparative analysis of Australian and New Zealand print media 1998-2008. Journal of Immigrant and Refugee Studies, 9, 345-366.

Ryan Al-Natour [email protected]

 Al-Natour, R. (2015) The constructions of Sydney's 'Muslim ghettoes'. Journal of Contemporary Islam. Vol 9: 131-147.  Al-Natour, Ryan J.(2010) 'Folk devils and the proposed Islamic school in Camden', Continuum, 24: 4, (573 — 585)  Al-Natour, R. (2010) ''The mouse that dared to roar': Youths and the Camden controversy', Youth Studies Australia. Vol 29(2) (42-50)  Al-Natour, R., (2010) ', Ragheads and Rednecks', Nebula: Journal of Multidisciplinary Scholarship. (7.1/7.1) June. (1-22)

Anne Aly [email protected]  Aly, A. (2009). Something to fear. In A.Aly, L.Green & M.Balnaves (Eds), Social implications of fearing terrorism. A report on Australian responses to the images and discourses of terrorism and the other: Establishing a metric of fear (pp. 36-38). Perth, Western Australia: Edith Cowan University. (also see http://www.explodingmediamyths.org.au/index.html)  Aly, Anne, ‘Media Hegemony, Activism and Identity: Muslim Women Representing Muslim Women’ in Beyond the Hijab Debates: New Conversations on Gender, Race and Religion’ ed. Tanja Dreher and Chris Ho (Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars, 2009), 18- 31  Aly, A., and L. Green. (Apr. 2008) "'Moderate Islam': Defining the Good Citizen," M/C Journal, 10(6)/11(1).  Aly, A., and L. Green. (May. 2008) "Less than Equal: Secularism, Religious Pluralism and Privilege," M/C Journal, 11(2).  Aly, A. (2006). Australian Muslim responses to the discourse on terrorism in the Australian popular media. Australian Journal of Social Issues, 42, 27-40  Aly, A., & Walker, D. (2007). Veiled Threats: Recurrent Cultural Anxieties in Australia. Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs, 27(2), 203-214

Abe Ata [email protected]

 Ata, Abe. W.(2013) Education Integration Challenges: The Case of Australian Muslims. , David Lovell Publishing David Lovell Publishing  Ata, A. (2010). Entrapping Christian and Muslim Arabs in a cartoon: The other anti-Semitism. Journal of Muslim Minorities (UK), 30, 457-462.

1.  Ata, A, Bastian, B. & Lusher, D. (2009). Intergroup contact in context: The mediating role of social norms and group-based perceptions on the contact– prejudice. The International Journal of Intercultural Relations, 33, 498-506.

Martha Augoustinos [email protected]  Augoustinos, M. & Every, D. (2007). The language of contemporary racism. Journal of Language and , 26(2), 123-141.  Augoustinos, M., Tuffin, K., & Every, D. (2005). New racism, meritocracy and individualism: constraining affirmative action in education. Discourse & Society, 16(3), 315-339.  Augoustinos, M. & Every, D. (2007). Contemporary racist discourse: Taboos against racism and racist accusations. (pp. 233-254). In A. Weatherall, B. Watson & C. Gallois (Eds.) Language, Discourse and Social Psychology. London: Palgrave Macmillan.  Hill, M.E., & Augoustinos, M. (1997). Re/ examining gender bias in achievement attributions. Australian Journal of Psychology, 49, 85-90.  Hill, M. E., & Augoustinos, M. (2001). Stereotype change and prejudice reduction: Short- and long-term evaluation of a cross-cultural awareness program. Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology, 11(4), 243-262.

Hurriyet Babacan [email protected]  Babacan, H., and Hollinsworth, D. (2009). Confronting racism in communities project. Queensland. CMPC and Qld Government, Brisbane  Babacan, H. (2008). Addressing Denial: The First Step in Responding to Racism. In H.Babacan & N. Gopalkrishnan (Eds), The complexities of racism: Proceedings of the Second International Conference on “ in the New World Order. Queensland: University of the Sunshine Coast. ISBN13 978-0- 9804744-1-1. Nikola Balvin [email protected]  Balvin, N., & Kahima, Y. (2012). Hidden obstacles to Reconciliation: The persistence of stereotypes. In D. Bretherton & N. Balvin (Eds.), Peace Psychology in Australia (pp.197-219). New York: Springer Science+Business Media. (contact authors direct for chapter)

Fiona Barlow [email protected]  Alperin, A., Hornsey, M. J., Hayward, L. E., Diedrichs, P. C., & Barlow, F. K. (2014). Applying the contact hypothesis to anti-fat attitudes: Contact with overweight people is related to how we interact with our bodies and those of others. Social Science & Medicine.  Sengupta, N. K., Milojev, P., Barlow, F. K., & Sibley, C. G. (2014). Ingroup Friendship and Political Mobilization Among the Disadvantaged. Cultural Diversity and Ethnic Minority Psychology.  Durante, F., Fiske., S.T., ..., & Barlow, F.K. (2013). Nations’ income inequality predicts ambivalence in stereotype content: How societies mind the gap. British Journal of Social Psychology, 52, 726-746.

2.  Barlow, F.K., Hornsey, M. J., Thai, M., Sengupta, N., & Sibley, C. G. (2013). The wallpaper effect: The contact hypothesis fails for minority group members who live in areas with a high proportion of majority group members. PLoS One.  Thai, M., Barlow, F. K. & Hornsey, M.J. (2014). (Deviant) friends with benefits: The impact of group boundary permeability on minority group members’ responses to ethnic deviance. Social Psychological and Personality Science.  Kelly, A.J., Dubbs, S.L., & Barlow, F.K. (in press). Dangerous dominants: Men’s social dominance orientation predicts responses to romantic rejection, endorsement of rape myths, and support for lowering the age of consent. Archives of Sexual Behavior.  Barlow, F., Paolini, S., Pedersen, A., Hornsey, M.J., Radke, H.R.W., Harwood, J., Rubin, M. & Sibley, C.G. (2012). The contact caveat: Negative contact predicts increased prejudice more than positive contact predicts reduced prejudice. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 38(12), 1629–1643. doi 10.1177/0146167212457953.  Barlow, F.K., Louis, W.R., and Terry, D.J. (2010). Minority report: Social identity, cognitions of rejection and intergroup anxiety predicting prejudice from one racially marginalized group towards another. European Journal of Social Psychology, 40, 805-818. DOI: 10.1002/ejsp.651  Barlow, F. K., Louis, W., & Hewstone, M. (2009). Rejected! Cognitions of rejection and intergroup anxiety as mediators of the impact of cross-group friendships on prejudice. British Journal of Social Psychology, 48(3), 389-405.  Sibley, C.G., & Barlow, F.K. (2008). Ubiquity of Whiteness in majority group national imagination: Australian = White, but New Zealander does not. Australian Journal of Psychology, 61, 119-127.

Mariette Berndsen [email protected]  Berndsen, M. & Gausel, N. (in press). When majority members exclude ethnic minorities: The impact of shame on the desire to object to immoral acts. European Journal of Social Psychology. doi: 10.1002/ejsp.2127

Santina Bertone [email protected]  S. Bertone, ‘Unions, the Workplace and Social Cohesion’ in J. Jupp & J. Nieuwenhuysen (eds.) (2007) Social Cohesion in Australia, Cambridge University Press, Melbourne, pp. 124-135, ISBN 978-0521-70943-9.  S. Bertone (2009) ‘Immigration and the Labour Market’ in Freeman, G., Jupp, J., Higley, J. & Nieuwenhuysen, J. Nations of Immigrants: Australia and the USA Compared, Edward Elgar publishing, Cheltenham, UK:109-130 ISBN 84844636 6: 86-99.  S. Bertone, keynote presentation at ICEPA forum: Overqualified and Undervalued: employment barriers for culturally diverse people in Australia, presentation titled: ‘Overqualified and undervalued: what is the evidence?, 21 August, 2009, Victoria University, Melbourne

Linda Briskman [email protected]

3.  Briskman, L. (2013), ‘Technology, control and surveillance in Australia’s immigration detention centers’, Refuge, 29 (1), 9-19.  Briskman, L. (2013) ‘Courageous ethnographers or agents of the state: Challenges for social work’, Critical and Radical Social Work, 1(1), 33-48,  Briskman, L. (2013), ‘Sanctions against Iran’, Arena, No. 125, 16-18.  Briskman, L. and Libesman, T. (2014), ‘De-colonisation or re-colonisation: Contemporary social work and Indigenous Australians’, in In the Shadow of the Law, eds. S. Rice and A. Day, Federation Press, Sydney.  Briskman, L. (2014 in press), Social Work with Indigenous Communities: A human rights approach, 2nd edition, The Federation Press, Sydney (will be out in 2 weeks)  Linda Briskman, Lucy Fiske and Michelle Dimasi (2012) ‘Collateral Damage: The impact of asylum seeker policy on Christmas Islanders 2001 – 2011’/ Shima. The International Journal of Research into Small Island Cultures titled (vol. 6(2)) Can be downloaded from: http://espace- stats.library.curtin.edu.au/author_statistics.pl?author=Fiske,_Lucy  Briskman, L. (2012), 'Protecting vulnerable asylum seekers: Australia's human rights violations, Social Dialogue, IASSW, http://social- dialogue.com/SD3_new.pdf  Briskman, L. (2012), ‘A human rights approach to global justice: A social work response, in Proceedings of International Consortium for Social Development Asia Pacific Conference, Yogyakarta , pp. 1-16 (sorry I dumped the heavy tome when in Indonesia)  Briskman, L. and Hashemi, K. (2012), Cultures in Support of HumanNAM Yearbook on Human Rights and Cultural Diversity, Volume 1, NAMCHRCD, Tehran. (PDF attached)  Fleay, C. and Briskman, L. (2012), The Hidden Men, Report to the Minister for Immigration on visits to Curtin Immigration Detention (Derby), CHRE, Curtin University, Perth.  Briskman, L., Zion, D. and Loff, B. (2012), ‘Care or collusion in asylum seekerdetention’, Ethics and Social Welfare, 6(1), pp. 37-55.  Briskman, L. (2012), ‘A clash of paradigms for asylum seekers’: Border security and human security, in Activating Human Rights and Peace: Theories, practice and contexts (eds. B. Chen Goh, R. Garbutt and B. Offord), Ashgate, Surrey, pp. 270-286.  Briskman, L. and Jesus Unz Peman, M. (2012), ‘ Respecting rights’ in Practising Social Work Ethics Around the World: Cases and commentaries (eds. S. Banks and K. Nohr), Routledge, London, pp. 69-76.  Briskman, L. (2012), ‘Integrating migrants and refugees in rural settings’ in Social work in rural and remote Australia (eds. J. Maidment and U. Bay, Allen and Unwin, Sydney, pp. 146-160.  Briskman, L., Latham, S., & Goddard (2008). Introduction. In Human Rights Overboard: Seeking Asylum in Australia (pp. 18-22). Scribe, Melbourne.  Briskman, L. (2008), ‘Decolonizing Social Work in Australia’ in Indigenous social work around the world: Towards culturally relevant education and practice. (eds. M. Gray, J. Coates and M. Yellow Bird), Ashgate Press, Aldershot.

4.  Briskman, L., & Babacan, A. (2008). Turning away thy neighbour. In Asylum Seekers: International perspectives on interdiction and deterrence (pp. 1-9). Cambridge Scholars Publishing: Newcastle, UK.  Australian Council of Heads of Schools of Social Work. (2006). We’ve Boundless Plains to Share: The First Report of the People’s Inquiry into Detention. Melbourne: ACHSSW (The PID Inquiry was convened by Linda Briskman and Chris Goddard).  Briskman, L. (2007). Social work with Indigenous communities [Prologue]. Sydney: The Federation Press.

Priscilla Brice [email protected]  Brice, P (2014),A study into the factors which make non-profit racism prevention initiatives effective, 2013 Churchill Fellowship Report, The Winston Churchill Memorial Trust, Canberra.

Michelle Burrell [email protected]  Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission. (2008). Rights of passage: The experiences of Australian-Sudanese young people. Victorian Human Rights Commission: Melbourne, Australia.

Val Colic Peisker [email protected]  Colic-Peisker, V. and J. Hlavac (2014) ‘Anglo-Australian and non- Anglophone middle classes: ‘foreign accent’ and social inclusion’, Australian Journal of Social Issues 49(3): 349-371  Colic-Peisker, V. and S. Robertson (2014) ‘Social change and community cohesion: An ethnographic study of two Melbourne suburbs’, Ethnic and Racial Studies, published online on 14 Aug 2014, at http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/01419870.2014.939205#.VEl3o_m Syi4  Hebbani, A. and V. Colic-Peisker: ‘Communicating one’s way to employment: A case study of African settlers in Brisbane, Australia’, Journal of Intercultural Studies, 33(5): 529-47, Oct 2012  Colic-Peisker, V. (2011). ‘A new era in Australian multiculturalism? From working-class “ethnics” to a “multicultural middle-class”’, International Migration Review, 45(3): 561-586  Colic-Peisker, V. (2011). ‘Ethnics’ and ‘Anglos’ in the Australian labour market: Advancing Australia fair? Journal of Intercultural Studies, 32(6): 639-656  Colic-Peisker, V. (2009) ‘Visibility, settlement success and life satisfaction in three refugee communities in Australia’ Ethnicities, 9(2): 175-199.  Colic-Peisker, V. (2005). ‘At Least You're the Right Colour’: Identity and Social Inclusion Bosnian Refugees in Australia. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 31(4), 615-638.  Val Colic-Peisker & Farida Tilbury: ‘Being black in Australia: a case study of intergroup relations’, Race and Class, 49(4):38-56, April-June 2008

5.  Colic Peisker, V., & Tilbury, F. (2006). Employment niches for recent refugees: Segmented labour market in twenty-first century Australia. Journal of Refugee Studies, 19(2), 203-229.  Colic-Peisker, V., & Tilbury, F. (2007). Integration into the Australian labour market: the experience of three “visibly different” groups of recently arrived refugees, International Migration, 45(1), 59-85

Jess Coyle [email protected]  Jess Coyle (2014): Where are all the Koorie football players? The AFL and the invisible presence of Indigenous Victorians, Sport in Society: Cultures, Commerce, Media, Politics, DOI: 10.1080/17430437.2014.976009

Justine Dandy [email protected]  Dandy, J., & Pe-Pua, R. (2015, online). The Refugee Experience of Social Cohesion in Australia: Exploring the Roles of Racism, Intercultural Contact, and the Media. Journal of Immigrant & Refugee Studies. http://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/iZgIB9IPkWyIKYASpBjf/full  Dandy, J., Durkin, K., Barber, B., & Houghton, S. (2015). Academic expectations of Australian students from Aboriginal, Asian and Anglo-Celtic backgrounds: Perspectives of teachers, trainee-teachers and students. International Journal of Disability, Development and Education, 62, 60-82.  Dandy, J. & Pe-Pua, R. (2013). Beyond mutual acculturation: Intergroup relations among immigrants, Anglo-Australians and Indigenous Australians. Zeitschrift für Psychologie/Journal of Psychology, 221, 232-241. Sharon Dane [email protected]  Dane, S. K., & MacDonald, G. (in press). Heterosexuals' acceptance predicts same-sex attracted young adults' well-being beyond ingroup support. Journal of Social and Personal Relationships.

Graham Davidson [email protected]  Hughes, L., & Davidson, G.R. (2011). Effects of non-Indigenous Australian human resource managers’ gender and attitudes and applicants’ ethnicity and gender on resumé evaluations. Journal of Pacific Rim Psychology, 5, 1-10.  Davidson, G. R., & Carr, S. C. (2010). Forced migration, and poverty: Introduction. Journal of Pacific Rim Psychology (Special issue on Psychological Impacts of Forced Migration), 4, 1-6.  Davidson, G.R., Murray, K.E., & Schweitzer, R. (2010). Review of refugee mental health assessment: Best practices and recommendations. Journal of Pacific Rim Psychology (Special issue on Psychological Impacts of Forced Migration), 4, 72-85.  Davidson, G.R., Murray, K.E., & Schweitzer, R. (2008). Review of refugee mental health and wellbeing: Australian perspectives. Australian Psychologist, 43, 160 – 174.

6.  Murray, K.E., Davidson, G.R., & Schweitzer, R. (2008). Psychological well- being of refugees: Resettling in Australia. Melbourne: Australia.

Hanifa Deen [email protected] Ali Abdul v The King: Muslim stories from the dark days of White Australia Hanifa Deen (UWA Publishing) ISBN: 9781742582580

Michelle Dimasi [email protected]  Dimasi, M., & Briskman, L. (2010). Let them land: Christmas Islander responses to Tampa. Journal of Refugee Studies, DOI:10.1093/jrs/feq015.

Ngaire Donaghue [email protected]  Donaghue, N., & Walker, I. (2007). Contact sports: Judgments of Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal Australian football league players’ performance. South African Journal of Psychology, 37(4), 771–782  Donaghue, N., & Smith, N. (2008). Not half bad: Self and other judgements of body size and attractiveness across the life span. Sex Roles, 58, 875-882.

Rob Donovan [email protected]  Donovan, R.J. Increased Support for Aboriginal Reconciliation: Fact or Artefact? Australasian Journal of Marketing Research, 1998, 6(1), 13-25.  Donovan, R.J., & Leivers, S. (1993). Using paid advertising to modify racial stereotype beliefs. The Public Opinion Quarterly, 57, 205-208.  Donovan, R.J., & Spark, R. (1997). Towards guidelines for survey research in remote Aboriginal communities. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health, 21, 89-95.  Donovan, R., & Vlais, R. (2006). A review of communications components of anti-racism and pro-diversity social marketing/public education campaigns. Report to VicHealth, RJD Consulting Pty Ltd. http://www.vichealth.vic.gov.au/assets/contentFiles/Paper_1-Donovan_Communications_Marketing.pdf

Pat Dudgeon [email protected]  Dudgeon, P. (2008). Empowering research with Indigenous communities. Ngoonjook: a Journal of Australian Indigenous Issues, 32, 8-26.  Pedersen, A., Clarke, S., Dudgeon, P., & Griffiths, B. (2005). Attitudes toward Indigenous-Australians and asylum-seekers: The role of false beliefs and other social-psychological variables. Australian Psychologist, 40(3), 170-178.  Wright, M., Dudgeon, P., D’Antoine, H., & Wilkes, E. (2007). Letters: Would the Northern Territory plan pass the Government’s own ethical guidelines? Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health. Vol, 31 (5). 430-431

Kevin Dunn [email protected]  Dunn, K.M., and Nelson J. (2011) “Challenging the Public Denial of Racism: A Deeper Multiculturalism”, Journal of Intercultural Studies, 32(6), 587-602. DoI 21 November 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07256868.2011.618105

7.  Dunn, Kevin M., Gandhi, V., Pelleri, D. & Maeder-Han, K. (2011) "Racism in the tertiary education sector: a case of Indian student attacks in Australia", Geography Bulletin, 43(3), 7-16.  Dunn, K.M., Pelleri, D. and Maeder-Han K. (2011) "Attacks on Indian students: the commerce of denial in Australia", Race and Class, 52(4), 71-88.  Dunn K, Kamp A, Shaw W, Forrest J and Paradies Y. Indigenous Australians’ attitudes towards multiculturalism, cultural diversity, ‘race’ and racism. Journal of Australian Indigenous Issues, 2011 13(4): 19-31.  Loosemore M., Phua F., Dunn K. and Ozguc, U., 2010: “Operative experiences of cultural diversity on Australian construction sites”, Construction Management and Economics, 28(2), 177–188  Dunn, Kevin M. & Kamp, A. 2009: "The hopeful and exclusionary politics of Islam in Australia: looking for alternative geographies of 'Western Islam'", in Phillips, R. (Ed.) Muslims Spaces of Hope: Geographies of Possibility in Britain and the West (London, Zed Books), 41-66 (Chapter 3), ISBN 978184813300.  Dunn, Kevin M., Forrest J., Pe-Pua, R., Hynes M. and Maeder-Han, K. (2009) “Cities of race hatred? The spheres of racism and anti-racism in contemporary Australian cities”, Cosmopolitan Civil Societies: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 1(1), 1-14.  Dunn, K.M. 2009: “Performing Australian nationalisms at Cronulla”, in Noble, G. (Ed.) Lines in the Sand: The Cronulla Riots, Multiculturalism and National Belonging (Institute of Criminology Press), 76-94 (Chapter 5), ISBN 9780975196786.  Dunn, K.M., 2009: "Public attitudes towards hijab-wearing in Australia", in Dreher, T. and Ho, C. (eds) Beyond the Hijab Debates: New Conversations on Gender, Race and Religion, (Newcastle, Cambridge Scholars Press), 31-51 (Chapter 2), ISBN: 1-4438-0169-0, ISBN(13): 978-1-4438-0169-0  Dunn KM. 2008: “Guest Editorial – Comparative analyses of transnationalism: a geographic contribution to the field”, The Australian Geographer, 39(1), 1-7.  Dunn KM. & Ip D. 2008: “Putting Transnationalism in Context: comparing Hong Kong Chinese-Australians in Sydney and Brisbane”, The Australian Geographer, 39(1), 81-98.  Perrin R-L & Dunn KM. 2007: “Tracking the settlement of North African immigrants: speculations on the social & cultural impacts of a newly arrived immigrant group”, The Australian Geographer, 38(2), 253-73.  Dunn, K. M., Klocker, N.,& Salabay, T. (2007). Contemporary racism and Islamaphobia in Australia. Ethnicities, 7(4), 564-589.  Dunn, K.M., Forrest, J., Burnley, I., & McDonald, A. (2004). Constructing racism in Australia. Australian Journal of Social Issues, 39(4), 409-430. ISSN 0157-6321  Kevin also has a very useful racism site: http://www.uws.edu.au/social_sciences/soss/research/challenging_racism

Angela Durey [email protected]

8.  Durey, A and Thompson, SC. (2012) Reducing the health disparities of Indigenous Australians: Time to change focus. BMC Health Services Research. 12:151 doi:10.1186/1472-6963-12-151 http://www.biomedcentral.com/1472- 6963/12/151  Durey, A., Wynaden, D., Thompson, S., Davidson, P., Bessarab, D., & Katzenellenbogen, J. (2012 ). Owning solutions: A collaborative model to improve quality in hospital care for Aboriginal Australians. Nursing Inquiry, 19(2), 144-152.  Durey A, Thompson SC, Wood M. (2011) Time to bring down the twin towers in poor Aboriginal hospital care: Addressing institutional racism and misunderstandings in communication. Intern Med J. 42(1), 17-22.  Thompson, SC., Shahid S., Bessarab, D., Durey, A., Davidson, PM (2011). Not Just Bricks and Mortar: Planning Hospital Cancer Services for Aboriginal People. BMC Research Notes. 4(62). Available from http://www.biomedcentral.com/1756-0500/4/62  Durey, A. (2010) Reducing racism in Indigenous health care in Australia: Where does cultural education fit? Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health, 34, S87-92.  Durey, A., Hill, P., Arkles, R., Gilles, M., Petersen, K., Wearne, S., Canuto, C. Jackson Pulver, L. (2008) Overseas trained doctors in Australian Indigenous rural health services: negotiating professional relationships across cultural domains. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health, 32(6): 512-518

Ullrich K. H. Ecker [email protected]

 Ecker, U. K. H., Lewandowsky, S., Fenton, O., & Martin, K. (2013). Do people keep believing because they want to? Preexisting attitudes and the continued influence of misinformation. Memory and Cognition. DOI 10.3758/s13421-013- 0358-x

Danielle Every [email protected]  Every, D., & Perry, R. (2014). The relationship between perceived religious discrimination and self-esteem for Muslim Australians. Australian Journal of Psychology 2014; 66, 241–248. doi: 10.1111/ajpy.12067  Every, D., Thompson, K., Rainbird, S., Whetton, S., Procter, N., Abdul-Halim, S., Sebben, B. (2014). “We’re so lucky”: Meeting challenges to deliver benefits to children in immigration detention.The Australian Educational Researcher: 41(2), 209-225 (DOI) 10.1007/s13384-013-0134-8  Every, D., Whetton, S., Rainbird, S., Abdul-Halim, S., Procter, N., Thompson, K., Sebben, B. (2013). The social and economic impacts of immigration detention facilities: a South Australian case study. Australian Journal of Social Issues. 48(2), 173-196.  Every, D. (2013). “Shame on you”: The enactment and consequences of shame and shaming in asylum seeker advocacy. Discourse & Society, 26(6), 1-20  And a link to this e-journal article: Every, D. & Augoustinos, M. (2013). Hard hearts: A critical look at compassion and humanitarianism in refugee and asylum

9. advocacy. Refugee Review. Refugee Review, 1, 58-64. E-journal: http://refugeereview.wordpress.com/  Every, D., & Augoustinos, M. (2007). Constructions of racism in the Australian parliamentary debates on asylum seekers. Discourse & Society, 18(4), 411–436  Every, D. and Augoustinos, M. (2008) ‘Taking advantage’ or fleeing persecution? Opposing accounts of asylum seeking. Journal of Sociolinguistics. 12 (5), 648– 667  Every, D. and Augoustinos, M. (2008). Constructions of Australia in pro- and anti-asylum seeker discourse, Nations and Nationalism. 14(3), 562-580.

Karen Farquharson [email protected]

 David Nolan, Karen Farquharson, Violeta Politoff & Timothy Marjoribanks (2011): Mediated Multiculturalism: Newspaper Representations of Sudanese Migrants in Australia, Journal of Intercultural Studies, 32:6, 655-671  Karen Farquharson (2011): Doing ‘Race’ on the Internet: A Study of Online Parenting Communities, Journal of Intercultural Studies, 32:5, 479-493

Angeline Ferdinand [email protected]  Ferdinand A, Paradies Y, Perry R, Priest N, Kelaher M. 2014. Aboriginal health promotion through addressing employment discrimination, Australian Journal of Primary Health, 20(4) 384-388.  Kelaher M, Ferdinand A, Paradies Y. 2014. Experiencing racism in health care: The mental health impacts for Victorian Aboriginal communities. Medical Journal of Australia, 201(1):44-47.  Ferdinand A, Paradies Y, Kelaher M. The Role of Effective Partnerships in an Australian Place-Based Intervention to Reduce Race-Based Discrimination. Public Health Reports. 2013 128(3): 54-60.  Ferdinand A, Kelaher M, & Paradies, Y (2013). Mental health impacts of racial discrimination in Victorian culturally and linguistically diverse communities. Victorian Health Promotion Foundation. Melbourne, Australia.  Ferdinand A, Paradies Y, Kelaher M. 2013. Mental Health Impacts of Racial Discrimination in Victorian Aboriginal Communities. Melbourne, Lowitja Institute.

Lucy Fiske [email protected]

 Fiske, L. and Shackel, R. (2015) 'Gender, Poverty and Violence: Transitional justice responses to converging processes of domination of women in eastern DRC, northern Uganda and Kenya.' Women's Studies International Forum vol 51, pp. 110 – 117. Available free until 4 September 2015 via this link: http://authors.elsevier.com/a/1RNVZ-6kq9Af4

10.  Fiske, L. and Shackel, R. (2015) 'Gender, Poverty and Violence: Transitional justice responses to converging processes of domination of women in eastern DRC, northern Uganda and Kenya.' Women's Studies International Forum vol 51, pp. 110 - 117  Lucy Fiske, Mary Anne Kenny and Nicholas Proctor (2014) "Manus Island hunger strikes are a call to Australia's conscience" in The Conversation 19 January. Available http://theconversation.com/manus-island-hunger-strikes-are-a-call-to-australias- conscience-36419  Fiske, L. (2013) 'Riotous refugees or systemic injustice? A sociological examination of riots in Australian immigration detention centres' Journal of Refugee Studies, doi 10.1093/jrs/fet047

 Kenny, M.A. & Fiske, L. (2013) “Regulation 5.35: Coerced treatment of detained asylum seekers on hunger strike. Legal, ethical and human rights implications” in Juss, S. (ed) The Ashgate Research Companion to Migration Theory & Policy. Ashgate Publishing, Williston pp. 423 – 442. Available: http://espace- stats.library.curtin.edu.au/author_statistics.pl?author=Fiske,_Lucy  Lucy Fiske (2012) Insider Resistence: Understanfing refugee protest against immigration detention in Australia 1999 - 2005, Curtin University Centre for Human Rights Education, PhD thesis. Can be downloaded from: http://espace- stats.library.curtin.edu.au/author_statistics.pl?author=Fiske,_Lucy  Fiske, L. (2009). The numbers prove Turnbull wrong. Retrieved ______, from: http://www.abc.net.au/unleashed/stories/s2551038.htm  Soldatic, K. and Fiske, L. (2009) 'Bodies 'locked up': intersections of disability and race in Australian immigration', Disability & Society, 24:3, 289 — 301

Caroline Fleay [email protected]  Fleay, C. & Hartley, L. (2015). ‘I Feel Like a Beggar’: Asylum Seekers Living in the Australian Community Without the Right to Work, Journal of International Migration and Integration, doi: 10.1007/s12134-015-0453-x  Fleay, C. and Briskman , L. (2013), ‘The Hidden Men’, Refugee Survey Quarterly, 32 ( 3), September, 113-129  Fleay, Caroline (2010) Australia and Human Rights: Situating the Howard Government, Newcastle-upon-Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing.

Susan Gair [email protected]  Susan Gair, Debra Miles, Dorothy Savage & Ines Zuchowski (2014): Racism Unmasked: The Experiences of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Students in Social Work Field Placements, Australian Social Work, DOI: 10.1080/0312407X.2014.928335

Jim Forrest [email protected]  Forrest, J., & Dunn, K. (2013). Cultural diversity, racialisation and the experience of racism in rural Australia: the South Australian case. Journal of Rural Studies, 30. doi.org/10.1016/j.jrurstud.2012.11.002

11.  Forrest, J., Hermes, K., Johnston, R., & Poulsen, M. (2012). The housing resettlement experience of refugee immigrants to Australia. Journal of Refugee Studies, doi:10.1093/jrs/fes020.  Forrest, J., & Dunn, K.M. (2007). Constructing racism in Sydney, Australia’s largest ethni-city. Urban Studies, 44(4), 699-721. ISSN 0042-0980  Forrest, J., & Dunn, K.M. (2010). Attitudes to multiculturalism in diverse spaces in Australia’s immigrant cities, Sydney and Melbourne. Space and Polity, 14, 81–102.  Forrest J. & Dunn, K.M. (2011) “Attitudes to diversity: new perspectives on the ethnic geography of Brisbane, Australia”, Australian Geographer, 42(4), 435- 453.

Farida Fozdar (Tilbury that was) [email protected]  Fozdar, F.E. 2014, Aussie Cows and Asylum Seekers: Cartooning About Two Key Political Issues in Renate Brosch, Kylie Crane (Eds.): Visualising Australia: Images, Icons, Imaginations, WVT Wissenschaftlicher Verlag Trier , Germany. P 135-149 [Please contact Farida if you would like a copy of this]  Fozdar, F.E. 2013, Religion and Inter-faith Relations in Andrew Jakubowicz and Christina Ho (eds) 'For those who've come across the seas ...': Australian Multicultural Theory, Policy and Practice,) Australian Scholarly Publishing Pty Ltd , Australian p 225-236 [Please contact Farida if you would like a copy of this]  Fozdar, F.E. 2014, Cosmopolitan Engagement in Researching Race Relations in New Zealand in Lejla Voloder and Liudmila Kirpitchenko (eds) Insider Research on Migration and Mobility: International Perspectives on Researcher Positioning, Ashgate , UK p 37-52 [Please contact Farida if you would like a copy of this]  Fozdar, F.E., Perkins, M 2014, Antipodean Mixed Race: Australia and New Zealand in Rebecca Chiyoko King-O'Riain, Stephen Small, Minelle Mahtani (eds) Global Mixed Race, New York University Press , USA p119-143 [Please contact Farida if you would like a copy of this]  Fozdar, F.E., Spittles, B. 2014, 'Of cows and men: Nationalism and Australian cow making', Australian Journal of Anthropology (The), 25, 1, pp. 73-90.  Fozdar, F., Spittles, B., & Hartley, L.K. (2014). Australia Day, flags on cars and Australian nationalism, Journal of Sociology doi: 1440783314524846  Colvin, C., Volet S, & Fozdar, F. 2013 ‘Local university students and intercultural interactions: conceptualising culture, seeing diversity and experiencing interactions’. Higher Education Research and Development.P. 1-16, DOI:10.1080/07294360.2013.841642  Colvin, C., Fozdar, F & Volet S 2013 ‘Intercultural interactions of mono-cultural, mono-lingual local students in small group learning activities: a Bourdieusian analysis’ British Journal of Sociology of Education, p 1-20, DOI:10.1080/01425692.2013.823834  Fozdar, F. & Hartley, L.K. (2013). Civic and ethno belonging among recent refugees to Australia, Journal of Refugee Studies. doi: 10.1093/jrs/fet018

12.  Fozdar, F. & Hartley, L.K (2013). Housing and the Creation of Home for Refugees in Western Australia, Housing, Theory and Society. doi:10.1080/14036096.2013.830985  Fozdar., F., & Hartley, L.K. (2013). Refugee resettlement in Australia: What we know and need to know. Refugee Survey Quarterly. doi: 10.1093/rsq/hdt009  Fozdar, A., & Pedersen, A. (2013). Diablogging about asylum seekers: building a counter-hegemonic discourse. Discourse and Communication. 7, 1–18. DOI: 10.1177/1750481313494497  Bennett, R. Volet, S.E. & Fozdar, F. (2013). ‘“I’d say it's kind of unique in a way": the development of an intercultural student relationship', Journal of Studies in International Education. DOI: 10.1177/1028315312474937  Fozdar, F (2012) ‘Beyond the rhetoric of inclusion’. Cultures in Refuge: Seeking Sanctuary in Modern Australia, Anna Hayes and Robert Mason (eds) Ashgate: Farnham.  Fozdar, F (2012) ‘Christianity in Australian national identity construction: some recent trends in the politics of exclusion’. Minority Groups: Coercion, discrimination, exclusion, deviance and the question of equality. Dan Soen (ed) NovaScience Publishers. P19-35.  Fozdar, F. (2011) ‘Constructing Australian citizenship as Christian; or how to exclude Muslims from the national imagining’, in Lobo, M & Mansouri, F (eds).Migration, Citizenship and Intercultural Relations (Ch 2, p33-44), Burlington, Ashgate.  Fozdar, F and Hartley, L (2012) Refugees in Western Australia: Settlement and Integration Final Report. MMRC and Lotterywest.  Fozdar, F and Hartley, L (2012) Refugees in Western Australia: Settlement and Integration Final Report Highlights. MMRC and Lotterywest.  Fozdar, F.and Volet, S. (2011). ‘Intercultural learning among Community Development students: Positive attitudes, ambivalent experiences’. Community Development. Vol 43:3:361-378.  Fozdar, F (2011) “Social cohesion and skilled Muslim refugees in Australia: employment, social capital, and discrimination”. Journal of Sociology. P1-20, Volume 48 Issue 2 June 2012 pp. 167 - 186  Fozdar, F (2011) “The Choir Boy and the Mad Monk: Christianity, Islam, Australia’s political landscape and prospects for multiculturalism.”, Journal of Intercultural Studies Vol. 32, No. 6, December 2011, pp. 621-636.  Fozdar, F (2011) “‘I’ve never looked at someone and thought what colour are they’: Contact theory and interracial friendship in New Zealand”. Journal of Intercultural Studies, 32.4:383-405.  Fozdar, F and Spittles, B (2010) “Patriotic vs proceduralist citizenship: Australian representations”. Nations and Nationalism. 16 (1):127-147.

13.  Turner, M and Fozdar, F (2010). “Negotiating ‘Community’ in Educational Settings: Adult South Sudanese Students in Australia”, Journal of Intercultural Studies 31 (4): 363-382.  Turner, M and Fozdar, F (2010) “Dependency, partiality and the generation of research questions in research into refugee education”, Issues in Educational Research. 20(2): 183-197  Fozdar F and Spittles B (in press) The Australian Citizenship Test: process and rhetoric, The Australian Journal of Politics and History, Accepted Feb 2009 [proofs]  Fozdar, F (2009) “‘The golden country’: Ex-Yugoslav and East African refugee experiences of settlement and ‘depression’”, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 35:8:1335-1352.  Tilbury, F, (2007) “‘I feel I am a bird without wings’: discourses of sadness and loss among east Africans in Western Australia”, Identities: Global Studies in Culture and Power, Volume 14, Issue 4 July 2007, p 433 – 458  Fozdar, F and Torezani, S (2008) “Discrimination and well-being: perceptions of refugees in Western Australia”, International Migration Review, 42(1): 30-63.  Torezani, S, Fozdar, F and Colic-Peisker, V (2008) “Looking for a ‘missing link’: formal employment services and social networks in refugees’ job search”, Journal of Intercultural Studies, 29(2): 135-152.  Fozdar, F., Wilding, R., & Hawkins, M. (2008). Anti-racism. In Race and ethnic relations (pp.256-285). Melbourne: Oxford University Press.  Fozdar, F (2008) “Duelling discourses, shared weapons: Rhetorical techniques used to challenge racist arguments”, Discourse and Society 19(4): 529-547.  Tilbury, F, and Rapley, M, (2004) "There are orphans in Africa still looking for my hands": African women refugees and the sources of emotional distress, Health Sociology Review,13 (1):54-64.  Tilbury, F (2007) “We are family’: the use of family tropes in refugee/advocate talk”, Journal of Social Identities, vol 13, No. 5, p 627-649  Tilbury, F., & Colic-Peisker. (2006). Deflecting responsibility in employer talk about race discrimination, Discourse and Society, 17(5), 651-676.

Peter Gale [email protected]  Gale, P. 2004, The Refugee Crisis and Fear: Populist Politics and Media Discourse, Journal of Sociology, Vol 40, No. 4, December, SAGE, pp 321-340  Gale, P. 2006, Fear, Race, and National Identity, in Dialogue, 25, 3, pp 35-42

Diane Gosden [email protected]

 Gosden, D. (2012). ‘'I Had To Do Something. I Couldn't Do Nothing!': Citizen Action In Support Of Asylum Seekers In Australia, 2001-2006’ Retrieved from: http://www.unsworks.unsw.edu.au/primo_library/libweb/action/dlDisplay.do?doc Id=unsworks_10624&vid=UNSWORKS

14.  Gosden, D. (2011). 'Collective Action in Support of Asylum Seekers: The Action of a Minority Australian Population in the Period 2001-2006', in P. Marcelino (ed) Home in Motion: The Shifting Grammar of Self and Stranger, Inter- Disciplinary Press, Oxford, UK. Retrieved from: https://www.interdisciplinarypress.net/online-store/ebooks/diversity-and- recognition/home-in-motion  Gosden, D. (2007). 'From humanitarianism to human rights and justice: a way to go', in Australian Journal of Human Rights, vol. 13, no. 1, pp.149-176. Retrieved from http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/AJHR/2007/6.pdf  Gosden, D. (2006). "What if no one had spoken out against this policy? ": The rise of asylum seeker and refugee advocacy in Australia', in Portal: Journal of Multidisciplinary International Studies, vol. 3, no. 1. Retrieved from: http://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/journals/index.php/portal/article/view/121  Gosden, D. (2005). 'What can ordinary people do? Reflections on advocacy' in Migration Action, vol. XXV11, no. 3, pp.26-32. Retrieved from: http://www.ajustaustralia.com/resource.php?act=attache&id=336

Teneha Greco [email protected]  Greco T, Priest N, & Paradies Y (2010): Review of strategies and resources to address race-based discrimination and support diversity in schools. Victorian Heath Promotion Foundation (VicHealth), Carlton, Australia.

Katharine Greenaway [email protected]  Greenaway, K.H., Louis, W.R., Hornsey, M.J., & Jones, J.M. (2013). Perceived control qualifies the effects of threat on prejudice. British Journal of Social Psychology. DOI:10.1111/bjso.12049 Published online 13 September 2013.  Greenaway, K.H., Louis, W.R., & Wohl, M.J.A. (2012). Awareness of common humanity and subjective temporal distance heighten expectations of intergroup forgiveness. Social Psychological and Personality Science, 3(4), 446-454. doi: 10.1177/1948550611425861  Greenaway, K.H., Quinn, E., & Louis, W.R. (2011). Appealing to common humanity increases forgiveness but reduces collective action among victims of historical atrocities. European Journal of Social Psychology, 41(5), 569-573. DOI: 10.1002/ejsp.802  Greenaway, K. H. & Louis, W. R. (2010). Only human: Hostile human norms can reduce legitimisation of intergroup discrimination by perpetrators of historical atrocities. British Journal of Social Psychology, 49(4), 765-783. DOI:10.1348/014466609X479202.

Kaine Grigg [email protected]  Grigg, K., and manderson, L. (2015). “Just a Joke”: Young Australian understandings of racism. International Journal of Intercultural Relations, 47, 195- 208. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijintrel.2015.06.006

15.  Grigg, K., & Manderson, L. (2015). Developing the Australian Racism, Acceptance, and Cultural-Ethnocentrism Scale (RACES). The Australian Developmental and Educational Psychologist, Advanced online publication. doi: 10.1017/edp.2015.7

 Grigg, K., & Manderson, L. (2014). Building Harmony: Measuring and reducing racism in Australian schools. The Australian Community Psychologist, 26(2), 68- 89.

 Grigg, K., & Manderson, L. (2014). Is there a relationship between psychopathic traits and racism? Current Psychology, Advanced online publication. doi: 10.1007/s12144-014-9283-9

Bernard Guerin [email protected]  Guerin, B. (2010). A framework for decolonization interventions: Broadening the focus for improving the health and wellbeing of Indigenous communities. Pimatisiwin: A Journal of Indigenous and Aboriginal Community Health, 8, 61- 83.  Guerin, B. (2005). Combating everyday racial discrimination without assuming racists or racism: New intervention ideas from a contextual analysis. Behavior and Social Issues, 14, 46-69.  Guerin, B. (2003). Combating prejudice and racism: New interventions from a functional analysis of racist language. Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology, 13, 29-45.  Guerin, B., & Guerin, P. (2008). Relationships in remote communities: Implications for living in remote Australia. The Australian Community Psychologist, 20, 74-86.

Pauline Guerin [email protected]  Taylor, K & Guerin, P (2010). Health care and Indigenous Australians: Cultural safety in practice. South Yarra, Vic: Palgrave Macmillan.  Guerin, B., & Guerin, P. (2007). Lessons learned from participatory discrimination research: Long-term observations and local interventions. The Australian Community Psychologist, 19, 137-149.  Guerin, P., & Guerin, B. (2007). Research with refugee communities: Going round in circles with methodology. The Australian Community Psychologist, 19, 150-162.  Guerin, P.B. & Elmi, F.H. (2004). The analysis of female circumcision stories: the uses and abuses of oral histories. Oral History in New Zealand, 16, 9-16.  Guerin, P.B., Allotey, P, Elmi, F.H. & Baho, S. (2006). Advocacy as a means to an end: Assisting refugee women to take control of their reproductive health needs, Journal of Women & Health, 43, 7-23.

Brian Griffiths [email protected]

16.  James, W., Griffiths, B., & Pedersen, A. (2011). Religious beliefs and prejudice against Australian Muslims and gays & lesbians. International Journal for the Psychology of Religion, 21, 212-227.  Griffiths, B., & Pedersen, A. (2009). Prejudice and the function of attitudes relating to Muslim Australians and Indigenous Australians. Australian Journal of Psychology, 61, 228-238.  Griffiths, B., Dixon, C., Stanley, G., & Weiland, R. (2001). Religious orientation and attitudes toward homosexuality: A functional analysis. Australian Journal of Psychology, 53, 12-17.

Michael Halloran [email protected]  Halloran, M. & Chambers, G. (2011). The effect of a common in-group prime on intentions to help Indigenous and homeless Australians. Australian Psychologist, 46, 163-170.  Halloran, M. (2007). Indigenous Reconciliation in Australia: Do values, identity, and collective guilt matter? Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology, 17, 1-18.  Halloran, M. J., & Brown, A. K. (2007). Mortality salience and worldview defense: The role of self-esteem and culturally valued behaviour. Progress in Asian Social Psychology, 6, 241-253.

Scott Hanson-Easey [email protected]  Hanson-Easey, S., Augoustinos, M., & Moloney, G. (2014). ‘They’re all tribals’: Essentialism, context and the discursive representation of Sudanese refugees. Discourse & Society, 25(3), 362-382. doi: 10.1177/0957926513519536  Hanson-Easey, S., & Augoustinos, M. (2012). Narratives from the neighbourhood: The discursive construction of integration problems in talkback radio. Journal of Sociolinguistics, 16, 28–55.  Hanson-Easey, S., & Augoustinos, M. (2011). Complaining about humanitarian refugees: The role of sympathy talk in the design of complaints on talkback radio. Discourse and Communication.5(3). 247-271  Hanson-Easey, S., & Augoustinos, M. (2010). Out of Africa: Accounting for refugee policy and the language of causal attribution. Discourse and Society. 21 (3), 295-323.  Hanson-Easey, S., & Moloney, G. (2009). Social representations of refugees: Place of origin as a delineating resource. Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology, DOI: 10.1002/casp.1010.

Lisa Hartley [email protected]

 Hartley, L.K., & Pedersen, A. (2015). Asylum seekers and resettled refugees in Australia: Predicting social policy attitude from prejudice versus emotion. Journal of Social and Political Psychology, 3(1), 179–197, doi:10.5964/jspp.v3i1.476.

17.  Hartley, L.K & Fleay, C. (2014). Policy as punishment: Asylum seekers living in the community without the right to work. http://apo.org.au/research/policy- punishment-asylum-seekers-community-without-right-work  Hartley, L., Pedersen, A., Fleay, C., & Hoffman, S. (2013). “The situation is hopeless; we must take the next step”: Reflecting on social action by academics in the asylum seeker policy debate. The Australian Community Psychologist, 25, 22-37.  Hartley, L. K., McGarty, C., & Donaghue, N. (2013). Understanding disagreement within the majority about action to atone for past wrongs. Journal of Applied Social Psychology. . doi: 10.1111/jasp.12023  Hartley, L & Fleay, C. (2012). Released but not yet free: Refugees and asylum seekers living in the community after long-term detention. Centre for Human Rights Education, Curtin University. http://info.humanrights.curtin.edu.au/local/docs/ReleasedNotYetFree_BV&CD_ FINALREPORT.pdf

 Hartley, L.K., Pedersen, A., & Dandy, J. (2012). Attitudes towards asylum seekers: An evaluation of a mature-aged community education programme. Racial Equality Teaching, 30, 34-38.  Hartley, L., & Pedersen, A. (2007). Asylum seekers: How attributions and emotion affect Australians’ views on mandatory detention of ‘the other’. Australian Journal of Psychology, 59(3), 119-131.

Nick Haslam [email protected]  Block, K., E. Riggs, and N. Haslam. 2013. Values and vulnerabilities: The Ethics of research with refugees and asylum seekers Brisbane: Australian Academic Press.  Haslam, N., & Holland. E. (2012). Attitudes towards asylum seekers: The Australian experience. In D. Bretherton & N. Balvin (Eds.), Peace Psychology in Australia (pp. 107-120). New York: Springer Science+Business Media. (contact authors direct for chapter)

 Haslam, N., & Pedersen, A. (2007). Attitudes towards asylum seekers: The psychology of prejudice and exclusion. In D.Lusher & N.Haslam (Eds), Yearning to breathe free: Seeking asylum in Australia (pp. 208-218). Sydney: Federation Press.

 Haslam, N. (2006). Dehumanization: An Integrative Review. Personality and Social Psychology Review, 10(3), 252–264

HREOC (Li Zhou) [email protected]  Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission. (2008). An international comparison of the Racial Discrimination Act 1975: Background Paper No 1. Retrieved ______, from:

18. http://www.humanrights.gov.au/racial_discrimination/publications/int_compariso n/RDA_int_comparison.pdf

Christine Ho [email protected]  Ho, C. (2007). Muslim women’s new defenders: Women’s rights, nationalism and Islamophobia in contemporary Australia. Women’s Studies International Forum, 30, 290-298.  Christina Ho (2011): Respecting the Presence of Others: School Micropublics and Everyday Multiculturalism, Journal of Intercultural Studies, 32:6, 603-619

To link to this article: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07256868.2011.618106

Sue Hoffman [email protected]  Hoffman, S. (2012) Living in Limbo: Iraqi Refugees in Indonesia. Refuge Volume 28, no. 1, pps 15-24. Accessible at http://pi.library.yorku.ca/ojs/index.php/refuge/article/viewFile/36085/32755  Hoffman, S. (2010). Fear, insecurity, & risk: Refugee journeys from Iraq to Australia (Doctoral dissertation). Retrieved from http://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/4459/  Hoffman S. (2010) ‘Looking back, looking forward: Australia, Indonesia and asylum seekers since 1999’ in (eds) Perera, S., Seal, G. & Summers, S. (pp. 117- 140). Enter at own risk?: Australia's population questions for the 21st century. Black Swan Press: Perth, Western Australia.  Hoffman, S. (2007; June). Reaching Australia: Iraqi asylum seekers in transit in south-east Asia. Paper presented at the Second Multi-Disciplinary Conference of the International Association of Contemporary Iraqi Studies. Philadelphia University, Jordan.

David Hollinsworth [email protected]  David Hollinsworth (2014): Unsettling Australian settler supremacy: Combating resistance in university Aboriginal studies, Race Ethnicity and Education, doi:10.1080/13613324.2014.911166 To link to this article: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13613324.2014.911166  Carter, J., & Hollinsworth, D. (2009). Segregation and protectionism: Institutionalised views of Aboriginal rurality. Journal of Rural Studies, 25(4), 414-424.  Hollinsworth, D. (2006). Confronting racism in communities: Guidelines and resources for anti-racism training workshops. Centre for Multicultural Pastoral Care, Paddington, QLD and the University of the Sunshine Coast, Queensland.

Aarti Iyer [email protected]  Iyer, A., & Leach, C. W. (2008). Emotion in inter-group relations. European Review of Social Psychology. 19, 86-125.  Iyer, A., Schmader, T., & Lickel, B. (2007). Why individuals protest the perceived transgressions of their country: The role of anger, shame, and guilt. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 33, 572-587.

19.  Leach, C. W., Iyer, A., & Pedersen, A. (2007). Angry opposition to government redress: When the structurally advantaged perceive themselves as relatively deprived. British Journal of Social Psychology, 46, 191-204.  Leach, C. W., Iyer, A., & Pedersen, A. (2006). Guilt and anger about in-group advantage as explanations of the willingness for political action. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 32, 1232-1245.

Andrew Jakubowicz [email protected]

 Jakubowicz, A.H. 2015, ''Hating to know':government and social policy research in multicultural Australia' in Husband, C. (ed), Research and Policy in Ethnic Relations Compromised Dynamics in a Neoliberal Era, Policy Press, Great Britain, pp. 53-78. View/Download from: https://opus.lib.uts.edu.au/research/handle/10453/35801.  Jakubowicz, A.H. 2015, ''In the beginning all is chaos . . .': Roaming the Dystopic Realm in Australian Multiculturalism' in Castles, S., Ozkul, D. & Cubas, M. (eds), Social Transformation and Migration: National and Local Experiences in South Korea, Turkey, Mexico and Australia, Palgrave Macmillan, UK, pp. 221- 236. View/Download from: https://opus.lib.uts.edu.au/research/handle/10453/35802.  Jakubowicz, A.H. 2014, ''And That's Goodnight From Us': Cultural Diversity and its Challenges for Public Service Media' in Horsti, K., Hultén, G. & Titley, G. (eds), Public Service Media and Cultural Diversity in Europe, Intellect, UK, pp. 225-240.  Jakubowicz, A.H. & Hadzelek, A.G. 2013, 'The Polish Jews of Shanghai and the Political Sociology of Historical Memory', Holocaust Studies: a journal of culture and history, vol. 19, no. 2, pp. 27-64. View/Download from: https://opus.lib.uts.edu.au/research/handle/10453/29642.  Jakubowicz, A., Collins, J.H., Reid, C. & Chafic, W. 2014, 'Minority Youth and Social Transformation in Australia: Identities, Belonging and Cultural Capital', Journal of Social Inclusion, vol. 2, no. 2, pp. 5-16  Jakubowicz, A. 2014, ''Don't mention it…': what government wants to hear and why about multicultural Australia', Cosmopolitan Civil Societies: An Interdisciplinary Journal, vol. 6, no. 2, pp. 1-1. View/Download from: Publisher's site  Andrew Jakubowicz and Christina Ho (editors) "For Those Who've Come Across the Seas...": Australian Multicultural Theory Policy and Practice, Melbourne, Australian Scholarly Press, 2013.  Jakubowicz, Andrew 2012 “Racism, anti-racism and Australian social research: a case-study in recovering socially-useful knowledge” accessed 27 July 2015 at http://andrewjakubowicz.com/publications/antiracism1998.  Jakubowicz (2011): Chinese Walls: Australian Multiculturalism and the Necessity for Human Rights, Journal of Intercultural Studies, 32:6, 691-706

Nahid Kabir [email protected]

20.  Nahid Afrose Kabir (2015), 'Muslim Youth's Identity in Australia: Vigilant, Rational and Bicultural', Journal of Applied Youth Studies, 1 (1): pp. 82-96.  Nahid Afrose Kabir, ‘Free Speech: The “Us and Them” Debate,’ in Erich Kolig (ed), Freedom of Speech and Islam. Ashgate: Surrey, England, pp. 163-186. [Please contact Nahid if you would like a copy of this] at [email protected]  Nahid Afrose Kabir, ‘Young Somalis in Australia, the UK and the USA: An Understanding of Their Identity and their Sense of Belonging’, Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs, Vol. 34, No. 3, 2014, pp. 1-23, Published online: 17 Jul 2014.  Kabir, N. (2007). The Cronulla Riot: How One Newspaper Represented the Event. In Curtis, B., Mathewman, S. and McIntosh, T. (Eds), Public Sociologies: Lessons and Trans-Tasman Comparisons: TASA/SAANZ Conference, Department of Sociology, The University of Auckland, 4-7 December (ISBN: 978-2-86869-114-5)  Kabir, N. (2007). Muslims in Australia: The double edge of terrorism. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 33(8), 1277-1297  Kabir, N. (2007). What does it mean to be un-Australian? Views of Australian Muslim students in 2006. People and Place, 15(1), 62-79.

Zalman Kastel [email protected]  Kastel, Z (2012). Positive Relations Between Groups. In S. Roeffy (Ed), Positive Relationships Evidence based practice across the world. (pp.245-259) London; Springer Press. (The Original article can be downloaded from http://www.springerlink.com/content/?k=Positive+Relationships%3a+Evidence+b ased+practice+across+the+world)

Natasha Klocker [email protected]  Klocker, N. (2015) ‘Place stigma as boundary-making from the outside in: the case of Cronulla’ Australian Geographer 46(4): 421-427. Retrieved: http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00049182.2015.1080341  Klocker, N., & Stanes, E. (2012): ‘Reel love’ across ethnic boundaries? The extent and significance of inter-ethnic intimacy in Australian cinema, Ethnic and Racial Studies, DOI:10.1080/01419870.2012.675080  Klocker, N. (2004). Community antagonism towards asylum seekers in Port Augusta, South Australia. Australian Geographical Studies, 42, 1-17.  Natascha Klocker, Brigid Trenerry & Kim Webster (2011). How does freedom of religion and belief affect health and wellbeing? Victorian Health Promotion Foundation (VicHealth), Carlton, Australia.

Clare Land [email protected]  Land, Clare (2015). Decolonizing solidarity: Dilemmas and directions for supporters of indigenous struggles. Zed Books, London. See: http://zedbooks.co.uk/paperback/decolonizing-solidarity

Carmen Lawrence [email protected]

21.

 Lawrence, C. (2008). Us and Them: Breaking Down the Barriers. Paper presented at the Fulbright Conference: Healthy People Prosperous Country. Adelaide: Australia.  Lawrence, C. (2007). Those people. In D.Lusher & N.Haslam (Eds), Yearning to breathe free: Seeking asylum in Australia (pp. 173-182). Sydney: Federation Press.

Winnifred Louis [email protected]  Amiot, C.E., Sansfaçon, S., & Louis, W.R. (2014). How normative and social identification processes predict self-determination to engage in derogatory behaviours against outgroup hockey fans. European Journal of Social Psychology, 44(3), 216-320. DOI: 10.1002/ejsp.2006  Louis, W. R., Mavor, K. I., La Macchia, S. T., & Amiot, C. E. (2014). Social justice and psychology: What is, and what should be. In M. Arken & J. Yen (Eds.), Justice and Psychology, special issue of the Journal of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology, 34(1), 14-27. doi: 10.1037/a0033033  Amiot, C.E., Sansfaçon, S., & Louis, W.R. (2013). Investigating the motivations underlying harmful social behaviors and the motivational nature of social norms. Journal of Applied Social Psychology. doi: 10.1111/jasp.12167 Published online 6 October 2013.  Louis, W. R., Greenaway, K.G., & McKimmie, B. (2013). A reference list for teaching about Indigenous Australians in psychology. Downloaded 20 May 2013 from http://www2.psy.uq.edu.au/~wlouis/IPTRL_v6.pdf .  Louis, W. R., Barlow, F. K., & Greenaway, K.H. (2012). National identity, Australian values and outsiders. In D. Bretherton & N. Balvin (Eds.), Peace Psychology in Australia, pp. 87-104. New York: Springer.  Louis, W., Esses, V.M., & Lalonde, R.N. (2013). National identification, perceived threat, and dehumanization as antecedents of negative attitudes toward immigrants in Australia and Canada. Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 43, pp. E156–E165. doi: 10.1111/jasp.12044  Mavor, K. I, Louis, W. R., & Laythe, B. (2011). Religion, prejudice, and authoritarianism: Is RWA a boon or bane to the psychology of religion? Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 50(1), 22-43. DOI: 10.1111/j.1468- 5906.2010.01550.x  Mavor, K. I, Macleod, C. J., Boal, M.J., & Louis, W.R. (2009). Right-wing authoritarianism, fundamentalism and prejudice revisited: Removing suppression and statistical artefact? Personality & Individual Differences, 46 (5-6), 592-597. doi:10.1016/j.paid.2008.12.016  Allpress, J., Barlow, F.K., Brown, R., & Louis, W. (2010). Guilt and shame as predictors of reparation following an intergroup apology. International Journal of Conflict and Violence, 4(1), 75-88.  Louis, W. R., Duck, J.M., Terry, D. J., & Lalonde, R.N. (2010). Speaking out on immigration policy in Australia: Identity threat and the interplay of own opinion and public opinion. Journal of Social Issues, 66(4), 653-672. DOI: 10.1111/j.1540-4560.2010.01669.x

22.  Louis, W. R., Lalonde, R. N., & Esses, V. M. (2010). Bias against foreign-born / foreign-trained physicians: Experimental evidence. Medical Education, 44, 1241- 1247, doi:10.1111/j.1365-2923.2010.03769.x  Nickerson, A. M., & Louis, W. R. (2008). Nationality versus humanity? Personality, identity and norms in relation to attitudes towards asylum seekers. Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 38, 796-817.  Louis, W. R., Duck, J., Terry, D. J., Schuller, R., & Lalonde, R. (2007). Why do citizens want to keep refugees out? Threats, fairness, and hostile norms in the treatment of asylum seekers. European Journal of Social Psychology, 37, 53-73.  Johnson, D., Terry, D. J., & Louis, W. R. (2005). Perceptions of the intergroup structure and Anti-Asian prejudice among White Australians. Group Processes and Intergroup Relations, 8, 53-71.  Louis, W. R., Mavor, K. I., & Terry, D. J. (2003). Reflections on the statistical analysis of personality and norms in war, peace, and prejudice: Are deviant minorities the problem? Analyses of Social Issues and Public Policy, 3(1), 189- 198.

Winnifred and her colleagues also have a very useful site for teaching tips on Indigenous Australians in psychology units: http://www2.psy.uq.edu.au/~wlouis/IPTRL_v6.pdf

Barbara Masser [email protected]  Masser, B., & Phillips, L. (2003). What do other people think? The role of prejudice and social norms in the expression of opinions against gay men. Australian Journal of Psychology, 55, 184-190.

Craig McGarty [email protected]  Douglas, K.M., McGarty, C., Bliuc, A-M, & Lala, G. (2005). Understanding cyberhate: Social competition and social creativity in online white supremacist groups. Social Science Computer Review, 23, 68-76.  O’Brien, L.V. & McGarty, C. (2009). Political disagreement in intergroup terms: Contextual variation and the influence of power. British Journal of Social Psychology, 48, 77–98.  McGarty, C., Pedersen, A., Leach, C. W., Mansell, T., Waller, J., Bliuc, A.-M. (2005). Group-based guilt as a predictor of commitment to apology. British Journal of Social Psychology, 44, 659-680.

Harriet McHugh-Dillon [email protected]  McHugh-Dillon, H. (2015). ‘If they are genuine refugees, why?’ Public attitudes to unauthorised arrivals in Australia. Melbourne: Victorian Foundation for Survivors of Torture.

Gail Moloney [email protected]  Moloney, G., Holtz, P., Wagner, W. (2013) Editorial cartoons & the visual representation of essentialist politics in the transnationalisation of religion. Special issue. Integrative Psychological and Behavioral Science. Volume 47, Issue 2 Page 284-298.

23. http://www.springerlink.com/openurl.asp?genre=article&id=doi:10.1007/s12124-013- 9236-0  Moloney, G. (2010) Acknowledging Gerard. Articulating social representations and identity through process and content: the resettlement of refugees in regional Australia.. Papers on Social representations, 19, 15.1-15.6. http://www.psych.lse.ac.uk/psr/. DISSR Classification  Moloney G. (2007). Social representations and the politically satirical cartoon: The construction and reproduction of the refugee and asylum-seeker identity In G. Moloney & I. Walker (Eds.) Social representations and identity: Content, process and power. Palgrave Macmillan, New York  Worboys, J., & Moloney G. (2005). Adolescent understanding of refugees: The role of social identity and intergroup contact. Published Conference Proceedings, 40th Australian Psychological Society annual conference, (APS). Past Reflections Future Directions, p 382 - 386

David Mellor [email protected]  Mellor, D. (2003). Contemporary racism in Australia: The experiences of Aborigines. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 29(4), 474-486  Mellor, D. (2007). Aboriginal and Non-Aboriginal Australia: The dilemma of apologies, forgiveness, and reconciliation. Peace and Conflict: Journal of Peace Psychology, 13(1), 11–36

Jacqueline Nelson [email protected]  Nelson, J. K. (2015). Racism and anti-racism in families: Insights from performativity theory. Sociology Compass, 9 (6), 487-498.  Nelson, J. K. (2014). Place-defending and the denial of racism. Australian Journal of Social Issues, 49(1), 67-85.  Nelson, J. K. (2014). ‘Speaking’ racism and anti-racism: perspectives of local anti-racism actors. Ethnic and Racial Studies, 1-15. doi: 10.1080/01419870.2014.889837  Nelson, J.K., Possamai‑Inesedy, A., & Dunn, K.M. (2012). Reinforcing substantive religious inequality: a critical analysis of submissions to the Review of Freedom of Religion and Belief in Australia Inquiry. Australian Journal of Social Issues Vol.47 No.3, 297-318  Nelson, J., Paradies, Y & Dunn, K.M. (2011). Bystander anti-racism: A review of the literature, Analyses of Social Issues and Public Policy, 11, 263-284.  Nelson J, Dunn K, Paradies Y, Pedersen A, Sharpe S, Hynes M, & Guerin B (2010). Review of bystander approaches in support of preventing race-based discrimination. Victorian Heath Promotion Foundation (VicHealth). Carlton, Australia.  McGinnity, F. Nelson, J., Lunn, P., & Quinn, E. (2010). Are Eamon and Eithne more employable than Hardeep and Heike? Evidence from a field experiment in Ireland. In L. Bond, F. McGinnity & H. Russell (Eds.) Making Equality Count: Irish and International Research Measuring Equality and Discrimination, pp.64- 83. Dublin: The Liffey Press.

24.

Yara Frias Neto [email protected]  Neto, Y.F., & Pedersen, A. (2013). No time like the present: Determinants of bystander anti-racism on behalf of Indigenous Australians. Journal of Pacific Rim Psychology, 7, 36-49. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/prp.2013.4

Drew Nesdale [email protected]  Nesdale, D., Maass, A., Durkin,K., & Griffiths, J. (2005). Group norms, threat, and children’s racial prejudice. Child Development, 76(3), 652-663.  Nesdale, D. (2007). The development of ethnic prejudice in early childhood: Theories and research. In O. Saracho & B. Spodek (Eds.), Contemporary perspectives on social learning in early childhood education (pp.213-240). Charlotte, N.C.: Information Age Publishing.  Nesdale, D., Maass, A., Kiesner, J., Durkin, K., Griffiths, J., & Ekberg, A. (2007). Effects of peer group rejection, group membership, and group norms, on children’s outgroup prejudice. International Journal of Behavioral Development. Special issue: Social Identity and Intergroup Attitudes in Children and Adolescents, 31,526-535.

Rivkah.Nissim [email protected]  Nissim R (2014), Building resilience in the face of racism: options for anti-racism strategies, Sydney Social Justice Network, University of Sydney, Sydney.

Office of Multicultural Interests [email protected]  Office of Multicultural Interests (2007). Across-government working party on settlement issues for African humanitarian entrants. Perth, Western Australia: Office of Multicultural Interests.  Office of Multicultural Interests (2009). Settlement issues for African humanitarian entrants in Western Australia. Perth, Western Australia: Office of Multicultural Interests.

Rachael O’Byrne [email protected]  O’Byrne, R., Rapley, M., & Hansen, S. (2007). You Couldn’t Say “No”, Could You?’: Young Men’s Understandings of Sexual Refusal. Feminism & Psychology, 16, 133–154.  O’Byrne, R., Hansen, S., & Rapley, M. (2007). “If a Girl Doesn’t Say ‘no’. . . “: Young Men, Rape and Claims of ‘Insufficient Knowledge. Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology, 18, 168–193.

Stefania Paolini [email protected]  Paolini, S., Harris, N. C., & Griffin, A. S. (2015, in press). Learning anxiety in interactions with the outgroup: Towards a learning model of anxiety and stress in intergroup contact. Group Processes & Intergroup Relations, 1368430215572265.

25.  Paolini, S., Harwood, J., Rubin, M., Husnu, S., Joyce, N., & Hewstone, M. (2014, accepted 04/04/14). Positive and extensive intergroup contact in the past buffers against the disproportionate impact of negative contact in the present. 44, 548-562 doi: 10.1002/ejsp.2029  Graf., S., Paolini, S., & Rubin, M. (2014, accepted 10/06/14). Negative intergroup contact is more influential, but positive intergroup contact is more common: Assessing contact prominence and contact prevalence in five Central European countries. European Journal of Social Psychology, 44, 536-547. DOI: 10.1002/ejsp.2029  Harwood, J., Paolini, S., Joyce, N., Rubin, M., Arroyo, A. (2011). Secondary transfer effects from imagined contact: Group similarity affects the generalization gradient. British Journal of Social Psychology, 50, 180–189  Paolini, S., Harwood, J., & Rubin, M. (2010). Negative intergroup contact makes group memberships salient: Explaining why intergroup conflict endures. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 36 (12), 1723-1738.  Paolini, S., Hewstone, M., & Cairns, E. (2007). Direct and indirect intergroup friendship effects: Testing the moderating role of the affective-cognitive bases of prejudice. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 33 (10), 1406-1420  Paolini, S., Hewstone, M., Voci, A., Harwood, J., & Cairns, E. (2006). Intergroup contact and the promotion of intergroup harmony: The influence of intergroup emotions. In R. Brown & D. Capozza (Eds.). Social identities: Motivational, emotional, and cultural influences (209-238). Hove, E. Sussex: Psychology Press.  Paolini, S., Hewstone, M., Cairns, E., & Voci, A. (2004). Effects of direct and indirect cross-group friendships on judgments of Catholics and Protestants in Northern Ireland: The mediating role of an anxiety-reduction mechanism. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 30, 770-786.

Yin Paradies [email protected]  Paradies Y. Whither anti-racism? Ethnic and Racial Studies, 2016 39(1): 1-15.  Paradies Y, Ben J, Denson N, Elias A, Priest N, Pieterse A, Gupta A, Kelaher M, Gee G. Racism as a determinant of health: A systematic review and meta- analysis. PLOS ONE, 2015 10(9): e0138511.  Habtegiorgis A, Paradies Y, Dunn K. (2014). Are racist attitudes related to experiences of racial discrimination? Within sample testing utilising nationally representative survey data. Social Science Research, 47, 178191.  Paradies Y, Truong M, Priest N. A systematic review of the extent and measurement of healthcare provider racism. Journal of General Internal Medicine. 2014 29(2): 364-387.  Kowal E, Franklin H, Paradies Y. Reflexive antiracism: a novel approach to diversity training. Ethnicities 2013 13(3): 316-336.  Jamieson LM, Steffens M, Paradies Y. Associations between discrimination and dental visiting behaviours in an Aboriginal Australian birth cohort. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health 2013 37(1): 92-93.  Biddle N, Howlett M, Hunter B & Paradies Y. Labour Market and other Discrimination facing Indigenous Australians. Australian Journal of Labour Economics. 2013 16(1): 91-113.

26.  Paradies Y, Priest N, Ben J, Truong M, Gupta M, Pieterse A, Kelaher M, Gilbert G. Racism as a determinant of health: A protocol for conducting a systematic review and meta-analysis. Systematic Reviews. 2013(2):85.  Russell Z, Pennay D, Webster K, & Paradies, Y. (2013). Choose to act: Bystander action to prevent race-based discrimination in the Victorian Community. Melbourne, Australia: Victorian Health Promotion Foundation.  Cunningham J, Paradies Y. Patterns and correlates of self-reported racial discrimination among Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander adults, 2008-09: Analysis of national survey data. International Journal for Equity in Health. 2013 12:47.  Paradies Y, Franklin H, Kowal E. Development of the Reflexive Antiracism Scale - Indigenous. Equality, Diversity and Inclusion: An International Journal. 2013 32(4): 348-373.  Habtegiorgis A, Paradies Y. Utilising Self-report Data to Measure Racial Discrimination in the Labour Market. Australian Journal of Labour Economics 2013 16(1): 5-41.  Paradies Y, Cunningham J. The DRUID study: Racism and self-assessed health status in an indigenous population. BMC Public Health 2012 12:131.  Paradies Y, Cunningham J. The DRUID study: Exploring mediating pathways between racism and depressive symptoms among Indigenous Australians. Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology. Accepted Dec 2010.  Downing R, Kowal E, Paradies Y. Indigenous Cultural Training for Health Workers in Australia. International Journal for Quality in Health Care. 2011 23(3): 247-257.  Paradies, Y, Chandrakumar, L, Klocker, N, Frere, M, Webster, K, Burrell, M & McLean, P (2009). Building on our strengths: a framework to reduce race-based discrimination and support diversity in Victoria. Full report, Victorian Health Promotion Foundation.  Paradies Y, Forrest J, Dunn K, Pedersen, A, Webster K. (2009). More than tolerance: Racism and the health of young Australians. In F.Mansouri (Ed), Youth Identity and Migration: Culture, Values and Social Connectedness (pp. 207-226). Common Ground Publishing, Altona, Victoria.  Paradies, Y., & Cunningham, J. (2008). Development and validation of the Measure of Indigenous Racism Experiences (MIRE). International Journal for Equity in Health, 7(9).  Paradies, Y., Harris, R., & Anderson, I. (2008). The impact of racism on Indigenous health in Australia and Aotearoa: Towards a research agenda. Discussion Paper No. 4, Cooperative Research Centre for Aboriginal Health, Darwin.  Paradies,Y., & Williams, D.R. (2008). Racism and Health. In K. Heggenhougen, & S. Quah (Eds.), Encyclopedia of Public Health (pp.474-483). San Diego: Academic Press.  Paradies, Y., & Cunningham,J. (2008). Experiences of racism among urban Indigenous Australians: Findings from the DRUID study. Ethnic & Racial Studies, 32(3), 548-573.

27.  Kelaher,M., Sheila,P., Lambert, H., Ahmad, W., Paradies,Y., & Davey Smith,G. (2008). Discrimination and health in an English Study. Soc.Sci.Med., 66(7), 1627- 1636.  Berman, G., & Paradies, P. (2008). Racism, disadvantage and multiculturalism: towards effective anti-racist praxis. Ethnic and Racial Studies pp. 1-19, iFirst article.  Paradies,Y., Montoya, M.J., & Fullerton, S.M. (2007). Racialized genetics and the study of complex diseases: The thrifty genotype revisited. Perspectives in Biology and Medicine, 50(2), 203-227.  Paradies Y. (2007). Racism. In B.Carson B, T.Dunbar, R.D.Chenhall, & Bailie, R. (Eds.)., Social determinants of Indigenous health (pp. 65-86). Crows Nest, NSW: Allen and Unwin.  Paradies,Y. (2006). A Review of Psychosocial Stress and Chronic Disease for 4th World and African Americans. Ethn Dis., 16(1), 295-308  Paradies,Y. (2006). Beyond Black and White: Essentialism, Hybridity and Indigeneity. Journal of Sociology, 42(4), 355-367.  Paradies, Y. (2006). A systematic review of empirical research on self-reported racism and health. International Journal of Epidemiology, 35, 888-901.  Kowal, E., & Paradies,Y. (2005). Ambivalent helpers and unhealthy choices: public health practitioners' narratives of Indigenous ill-health. Soc.Sci.Med., 60(6), 1347-1357.  Paradies,Y. (2006). Defining, Conceptualizing and Characterizing Racism in Health Research. Critical Public Health, 16(2), 143-157.  Paradies,Y. (2005). Affirmative action and equity in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health. Med.J.Aust., 183(5), 269-270.  Paradies, Y. (2005). Anti-racism and Indigenous Australians. Analyses of Social Issues and Public Policy, 5(1), 2005, 1-28.

Glenn Pearson [email protected]  Bishop, B., Vicary, D., Andrews, H. & Pearson, G. (2006). Towards a culturally appropriate mental health research process for Indigenous Australians. The Australian Community Psychologist, 18, 31-41

Anne Pedersen [email protected]  McWhae, L., Paradies, Y., & Pedersen, A. (2015). Bystander antiprejudice on behalf of Muslim Australians: The role of ethnocentrism and conformity. The Australian Community Psychologist, 27, 6-20.  Pedersen, A., Paradies, Y., & Barndon, A. (2015). The consequences of intergroup ideologies and prejudice control for discrimination and harmony. Journal of Applied Social Psychology. doi: 10.1111/jasp.12330  Pedersen, A., & Hartley, L.K. (2015). Can we make a difference? Prejudice towards asylum seekers in Australia and the effectiveness of antiprejudice interventions. Journal of Pacific Rim Psychology, 9, 1-14. doi: 10.1017/prp.2015.1

28.  Redmond, J., Pedersen, A., & Paradies, Y. (2014). Psychosocial predictors of anti-racist bystander action towards Indigenous Australians. Peace & Conflict: Journal of Peace Psychology, 20, 474-490. doi: 10.1037/pac0000062.  Stewart, K., Pedersen, A., & Paradies, Y. (2014). It’s always good to help when possible BUT...”: Obstacles to bystander anti-prejudice. The International Journal of Diversity in Education, 13, 39-53.  Turoy-Smith, K., Kane, R., & Pedersen, A. (2013). The willingness of a society to act on behalf of Indigenous Australians and refugees: The role of contact, intergroup anxiety, prejudice and support for legislative change. Journal of Applied Social Psychology. doi: 10.1111/jasp.12017  Pedersen, A., & Thomas, E. (2013). “There but for the grace of God go we”: Prejudice toward asylum seekers. Peace & Conflict: Journal of Peace Psychology, 19, 253-265. DOI: 10.1037/a0033738.  Croston, J., & Pedersen, A. (2013). ‘Tell me what I want to hear’: Motivated recall and attributions in media regarding asylum seekers. Australian Journal of Psychology, 65, 124-133. Doi: 10.1111/ajpy.12012.  Pedersen, A., Dunn K., Forrest, J., & McGarty, C. (2012). The two sides of prejudice and discrimination: Prejudice against Middle-Eastern Australians and Middle-Eastern Australians’ experiences of discrimination. Journal of Pacific Rim Psychology. DOI: 10.1017/prp.2012.3.  Suhnan, A., Pedersen, A., & Hartley, L.K. (2012). Re-examining prejudice against asylum seekers in Australia: The role of people smugglers, the perception of threat, and acceptance of false beliefs. The Australian Community Psychologist, 24, 79-97.  Pedersen, A., Fozdar, F., & Kenny, M. A. (2012). Battling boatloads of prejudice: An interdisciplinary approach to activism with asylum seekers and refugees in Australia. In D. Bretherton & N. Balvin (Eds.), Peace Psychology in Australia (pp. 121-137). New York: Springer Science+Business Media. (contact authors direct for chapter)  Pedersen, A., & Hartley, L.K. (2011). Prejudice against Muslim Australians: The role of values, gender and consensus. Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology. DOI: 10.1002/casp.1110.  Pedersen, A., Paradies, Y., Hartley, L.K. & Dunn, K.M. (2011). Bystander anti- prejudice: Cross-cultural education, links with positivity towards cultural “outgroups” and preparedness to speak out. Journal of Pacific Rim Psychology, 5, 19-30.  Pedersen, A., Walker, I., Paradies, Y., & Guerin, B. (2011). How to cook rice: Ingredients for teaching anti-prejudice. The Australian Psychologist, 46, 55-63.  Khan, S., & Pedersen, A. (2010). Black African immigrants to Australia: Prejudice and the function of attitudes. Journal of Rim Psychology, 4, 116-129.  Pedersen, A., & Fozdar, F. (2010). Refugee without refuge: Wasim, Phillip Adams, and a nation divided. Journal of Pacific Rim Psychology, 4, 7-18.  Pedersen, A., Aly, A., Hartley, L., & McGarty, C. (2009). An intervention to increase positive attitudes and address misconceptions about Australian Muslims: A call for education and open mindedness. The Australian Community Psychologist, 21, 81-93.

29.  Pedersen, A., Watt, S., & Griffiths, B. (2008). Prejudice against Australian asylum seekers and their function: Suggestions for anti-prejudice strategies. In H.Babacan & N. Gopalkrishnan (Eds), The complexities of racism: Proceedings of the Second International Conference on “Racisms in the New World Order. Queensland: University of the Sunshine Coast. ISBN13 978-0-9804744-1-1  Pedersen, A., Griffiths, B., & Watt, S. (2008). Attitudes toward outgroups and the perception of consensus: All feet do not wear one shoe. Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology, 18, 543–557.  Pedersen, A., & Barlow, F. (2008). Theory to social action: A university based strategy targeting prejudice against Aboriginal Australians. The Australian Psychologist, 43, 148-159.  Pedersen, A., Kenny, M.A., Briskman, L., & Hoffman, S. (2008). Working with Wasim: A convergence of community. The Australian Community Psychologist, 20, 57-72.  Field, C., Beven, J., & Pedersen, A. (2008). Ethnicity, attributions for offending behaviour, and judgments of responsibility and severity of sentence. Psychiatry, Psychology and Law, 15, 119-130.  Pedersen, A., Watt, S., & Griffiths, B. (2007). Prejudice against asylum seekers and the fear of terrorism: The importance of context. In V.Colic-Peisker & F.Tilbury (Eds)., Settling in Australia: The social inclusion of refugees (pp.38- 55). Centre for Social and Community Research, Murdoch University, Perth.  Pedersen, A., Dudgeon, P., Watt, S., & Griffiths, B. (2006). Attitudes toward Indigenous Australians: The issue of “Special Treatment". Australian Psychologist, 41(2), 85-94.  Pedersen, A., & Walker, I. (2000). Urban Aboriginal and Anglo-Australian children: Ingroup preference, self-concept, and teachers’ academic evaluations. Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology, 10(3), 183-197.  Pedersen, A., Walker, I., & Wise, M. (2005). “Talk does not cook rice”: Beyond anti-racism rhetoric to strategies for social action. The Australian Psychologist, 40, 20-30.  Pedersen, A., Watt, S., & Hansen, S. (2006). The role of false beliefs in the community's and the federal government's attitudes toward Australian asylum seekers. Australian Journal of Social Issues, 41(1), 105-124.  Pedersen, A., Attwell, J., & Heveli, D. (2005). Prediction of negative attitudes toward Australian asylum seekers: False beliefs, nationalism and self-esteem. Australian Journal of Psychology, 57, 148-160.  Pedersen, A., Beven, J., Walker, I., & Griffiths, B. (2004). Attitudes toward Indigenous-Australians: The role of empathy and guilt. Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology, 14, 233-249  Pedersen, A., Contos, N., Griffiths, B., Bishop, B., & Walker, I. (2000). Attitudes toward Aboriginal-Australians in city and country settings. The Australian Psychologist, 35(2), 109-117.  Pedersen, A., Donaghue, N., Villani, C., Banos de Boschini, N., Chua, C., & Stone, K. (2006). PMS, the false consensus effect and accuracy of estimation. Paper presented at the Conference of the Society of Australasian Social Psychologists. Canberra, Australia.

30.  Surawski, N., Pedersen, A., & Briskman, L. (2008). Resisting refugee policy: Stress and coping of refugee advocates. The Australian Community Psychologist, 22, 16-29.  Pedersen, A., & Walker, I. (1997). Prejudice against Australian Aborigines: Old- fashioned and modern forms. The European Journal of Social Psychology, 27, 561-587.

Suvendi Perera [email protected]  Suvendrini Perera and Joseph Pugliese. ‘Death in a Dry River: Black Life, White Property, Parched Justice’ Somatechnics 1.1 (2011): 65-86.  Suvendrini Perera, ‘Invested With Violence: Security, Values and Embodied Citizenship’ in Beyond the Hijab Debates: New Conversations on Gender, Race and Religion’ ed. Tanja Dreher and Chris Ho (Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars, 2008), 222 - 234.  Perera, S. ‘The Gender of Borderpanic: Women in Circuits of Security, State, Globalisation and New (and Old) Empire’ in Women, Crime and Social Harm: Towards a Criminology for the Global Era ed. Maureen Caine and Adrian Howe (Oxford: Hart 2008), 69-93.  Perera, S. ‘Aussie Luck’: The Borderpolitics of Citizenship Post-Cronulla Beach’, Australian Critical Race and Whiteness Studies 3.1 (2007).  Perera, S. ‘They Give Evidence: Bodies, Borders and the Disappeared’ Social Identities 12 (6) 2006: 637 –656  Perera, S. (2009). Introduction. Social Identities, 15(1), 3-9.

Ryan Perry [email protected]  Perry, R., Paradies, Y., & Pedersen, A. (in press). Religious ambivalence: Suppression of pro-social attitudes toward asylum seekers by right-wing authoritarianism. International Journal for the Psychology of Religion. Advance online publication. doi: 10.1080/10508619.2014.921473

Naomi Priest [email protected]  Priest et al., Promoting equality for ethnic minority NHS staff – what works? British Medical Journal 2015, July 15. http://www.bmj.com/content/351/bmj.h3297  Priest N, Perry R, Ferdinand A, Paradies Y, Kelaher M. Experiences of racism, intercultural attitudes, motivated fairness and mental health among primary and secondary school students in Australia, Journal of Youth and Adolescence. 2014 43(10): 1672-1687.  Priest N, Walton J, White F, Kowal E, Baker A & Paradies Y. Understanding the complexities of ethnic-racial socialization processes for both minority and majority groups: A 30-year systematic review. International Journal of Intercultural Relations. 2014 43(B):139-155.  Priest, N., Paradies, Y., Ferdinand, A., Rouhani, L., & Kelaher, M. (2014). Patterns of Intergroup Contact in Public Spaces: Micro-Ecology of Segregation in Australian Communities, Societies, 4, pp. 30–44; doi:10.3390/soc4010030

31.  Priest N, Paradies Y, Trenerry B, Truong M, Karlsen S, Kelly Y. A systematic review of studies examining the relationship between reported racism and health and wellbeing for children and young people. Social Science and Medicine. 2013 95:115-127.  Priest N, Paradies Y, Trenerry B, Truong M, Karlsen S, Kelly Y (in press). A systematic review of studies examining the relationship between reported racism and health and wellbeing for children and young people, Social Science and Medicine, accepted October 2012, http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2012.11.031.  Runions, K., Priest, N., & Dandy, J. (2011). Discrimination and psychological adjustment among Australian children from Middle-Eastern and Asian backgrounds. Australian Community Psychologist, 23, 23-33.  Priest N, Paradies Y, Gunthorpe W, Cairney S, Sayers S. Racism as a determinant of social and emotional wellbeing for Aboriginal Australian youth. Medical Journal of Australia. Accepted Dec 2010.  Priest N, Paradies Y, Stevens M, Bailie R. Exploring relationships between racism, housing and child illness in remote Aboriginal communities. Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health. In press.  Priest N, Paradies Y, Stewart P, Luke J. Racism and health among urban Aboriginal young people. BMC Public Health, 2011 11: 568.

Rob Ranzijn [email protected]  McConnochie, K., Ranzijn, R., Hodgson, L., Nolan, W., & Samson, R. (2012). Working in Indigenous contexts: Perceptions of non-Indigenous psychologists. Australian Psychologist, 46(4), 204-212. doi:10.1111/j.1742-9544.2011.00042.x.  McConnochie, K., & Ranzijn, R. (2012). Preparing Students for Cross-Cultural Practice: Indigenous Australians as a Case Study. Psychology Learning and Teaching (Special Edition on Globalisation and the Teaching of Psychology), 11(3), 344-351.  Ranzijn, R., & McConnochie, K. (2012). Teaching ‘intercultural diversity and Indigenous psychology’: The Talking Stick as a strategy to manage student discomfort around difficult issues. In S. McCarthy, J. Cranney, K. L. Dickson, A. Trapp and V. Karandashev (Eds.), Teaching Psychology around the World (Vol. 3) (pp. 15-29). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge Scholars Publishing.  Mitchell, M., Every, D., & Ranzijn, R. (2011). Everyday antiracism in interpersonal contexts: Constraining and facilitating factors for ‘speaking up’ against racism. Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology, 21, 329– 341.  Ranzijn, R. (2010). Active ageing: Another way to oppress marginalised and disadvantaged elders? Journal of Health Psychology, 15(5), 716-723  Ranzijn, R., McConnochie, K., & Nolan, W. (2009). Psychology and Indigenous Australians: Foundations of cultural competence. South Yarra, Vic: Palgrave Macmillan  Ranzijn, R., McConnochie, K., Day, A., Nolan, W., & Wharton, M. (2008). Towards cultural competence: Australian Indigenous content in undergraduate psychology. Australian Psychologist, 43, 132–139.

32. Joseph Reser [email protected]  Reser, J. (2004). What does it mean to say that Aboriginal suicide is different? Differing cultures, accounts, and idioms of distress in the context of indigenous youth suicide. Australian Aboriginal Studies, 2, 34-53.  Reser, J.P., & Muncer, S. (2004). Sense-making in the wake of September 11th: A network analysis of lay understandings. British Journal of Psychology, 95, 283–296.  Sanson, A., Augoustinos, M., Gridley, H., Kyrios, M., Reser, J., & Turner, C. (1998). Racism and prejudice: An Australian Psychological Society Position Paper. Australian Psychologist, 33, 161-182.

Damien W. Riggs [email protected]  Riggs, D. (2013). Critical psychology in a context of ongoing acts of colonisation. Critical Psychology in Changing World, 10, 79-87.  Due, C. & Riggs, D.W. (2011). Representations of Indigenous Australians in the mainstream news media. Teneriffe, QLD: Post Pressed. See: http://www.e- contentmanagement.com/books/447/representations-of-indigenous-australians-in- the  Riggs, D.W. (2011). The racial politics of marriage: Rights and relationships in colonial context. In V. Marsh (Ed.) Speak now: Australian perspectives on same- sex marriage. Melbourne: Clouds of Magellan. See: http://cloudsofmagellan.net/speak-now/  Riggs, D.W. (2013). Anti-Asian sentiment amongst a sample of white Australian men on gaydar. Sex Roles, 68, 768-778.  Riggs, D.W. (2012). Intercountry adoption and the inappropriate/d other: Refusing the disappearance of birth families. Social Policy and Society, 11, 455- 464.  Due, C. & Riggs, D.W. (2012). The terms on which child abuse is made to matter: Media representations of the Aurukun case. Australian Feminist Studies, 27, 3-18.  Riggs, D.W. & Due, C. (2011). (Un)common ground?: English language acquisition and experiences of exclusion amongst new arrival students in Australian primary schools. Identities: Global Studies in Culture and Power, 18, 273-290.  Riggs, D.W. (2011). Loving otherwise: Race, relationality and respectability in Wilkinson v Kitzinger. Critical Race and Whiteness Studies, 7.  Palasinski, M., Riggs, D.W., & Zebialowicz, A. (2011). ‘You don’t do it in public’: Racism, respectability and responsibility in Celebrity Big Brother. Celebrity Studies, 2, 164-177.  Riggs, D.W. & Due, C. (2010). Gay men, race privilege, and surrogacy in India. Outskirts: Feminisms Along the Edge, 22. Uploaded from: http://www.outskirts.arts.uwa.edu.au/volumes/volume-22/riggs.  Riggs, D.W. & Due, C. (2010). The management of accusations of racism in Celebrity Big Brother. Discourse and Society, 21, 257-271

33.  Riggs, D.W. & Augoustinos, M. (2007). Learning difference: Representations of diversity in storybooks for children of lesbian and gay parents. Journal of GLBT Family Studies, 3, 133-156.  Riggs, D.W. & Choi, P.Y.L. (2006). Heterosexism, racism and health psychology: Challenging or colluding with privilege? The Psychologist, 19, 288-291.  Riggs, D.W. & Walker, G.A. (2006). Queer(y)ing rights: Psychology, liberal individualism and colonisation. Australian Psychologist, 41, 95-103.  Riggs, D.W. & Augoustinos, M. (2005). The psychic life of colonial power: Racialised subjectivities, bodies and methods. Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology, 16, 445-467.

Mark Rubin [email protected]  Owuamalam, C. K., & Rubin, M. (2014). When do low status groups help high status groups? The moderating effects of ingroup identification, audience group membership, and perceived reputational benefit. Journal of Social and Political Psychology, 2, 289-312. Open access at: http://dx.doi.org/10.5964/jspp.v2i1.33  Rubin, M., Badea, C., & Jetten, J. (2014). Low status groups show in-group favoritism to compensate for their low status and to compete for higher status. Group Processes and Intergroup Relations, 17, 563-576. doi: 10.1177/1368430213514122  Rubin, M., & Paolini, S. (2014). Out-group flies in the in-group’s ointment: Evidence of the motivational underpinnings of the in-group overexclusion effect. Social Psychology, 45, 265-273. doi: 10.1027/1864-9335/a000171  Badea, C., Brauer, M., & Rubin, M. (2012). The effects of winning and losing on perceived group variability. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 48, 1094- 1099. doi: 10.1016/j.jesp.2012.03.006  Rubin, M., Watt, S. E., & Ramelli, M. (2012). Immigrants’ social integration as a function of approach-avoidance orientation and problem-solving style. International Journal of Intercultural Relations, 36, 498-505. doi: 10.1016/j.ijintrel.2011.12.009  Rubin, M. (2012). Group status is related to group prototypicality in the absence of social identity concerns. Journal of Social Psychology, 152, 386–389. http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00224545.2011.614648 Free access at http://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/cMtWfbQgq9HNRiVqZSGi/full  Rubin, M., Paolini, S., & Crisp, R. J. (2011). The relationship between the need for closure and deviant bias: An investigation of generality and process. International Journal of Psychology, 46, 206-213. doi: 10.1080/00207594.2010.537660  Rubin, M., Paolini, S., & Crisp, R. J. (2010). A processing fluency explanation of bias against migrants. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 46, 21-28.  Rubin, M. Paolini, S., & Crisp. R.J. (2010). A processing fluency explanation of bias against migrants. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 46, 21–28.  Rubin, M., & Hewstone, M. (2004). Social identity, system justification, and social dominance: Commentary on Reicher, Jost et al., and Sidanius et al. Political Psychology, 25, 823-844.

34.  Hewstone, M., Rubin, M., & Willis, H. (2002). Intergroup bias. Annual Review of Psychology, 53, 575-604.  Crisp, R. J., Hewstone, M., & Rubin, M. (2001). Does multiple categorization reduce intergroup bias? Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 27, 76-89.

Robert Schweitzer [email protected]

 Vromans, L., Shweitzer, R.D., & Brough, M. (2012). Multidimensional loss scale - Validating a cross-cultural instrument for measuring loss. The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 200, 349-357.  Schweitzer, R., Melville, F., Steel, Z., & Lacherez, P. (2006). Trauma, post- migration living difficulties, and social support as predictors of psychological adjustment in resettled Sudanese refugees. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 40, 1–9  Schweitzer, R., Greenslade, J., & Kagee. A. (2007). Coping and resilience in refugees from the Sudan: A narrative account. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 41:282-288  Schweitzer, R., Perkoulidis, S., Krome, S., Ludlow, C., & Ryan, M. (2005). Attitudes toward refugees: The dark side of prejudice. Australian Journal of Psychology, 57, 170-179.

Margaret Sim [email protected]  Sims, M. (2014). Racism? Surely not. Australasian Journal of Early Childhood 39(1), 89 - 93.  Sims, M (2004) Making values matter. Training in difference and diversity. Journal of Australian Research in Early Childhood Education. 11(1), pp 75 – 90  Sims, M & Hutchins, T (2001) Transition to child care for children from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds. Australian Journal of Early Childhood, 26 (3), pp 7 – 11  Sims, M., O'Connor, M., & Forrest, M. (2003). Aboriginal families and the school system. In Q. Beresford & G. Partington, (Eds.), Reform and Resistance in Aboriginal Education: the Australian Experience. (pp 69 – 91). Perth, WA: University of Western Australia Press.

Jack Smit [email protected]  Smit, Jack H. (2011). The Political Origins and Development of Australia's People Smuggling Legislation: Evil Smugglers or Extreme Rhetoric? Masters by Research (SocSc) Thesis. Social Justice Research Centre, Edith Cowan University. Available from http://www.safecom.org.au/m-socsc-thesis.htm

 Smit, Jack H. (2010). Malcolm Fraser’s response to ‘commercial’ refugee voyages. Journal of International Relations 8(2), University of Dhaka, Bangladesh.

 Smit, Jack H (erroneously named "Smits"). (2009). Uninvited and unheard: Australia’s case of post-Tampa boat arrivals. TAMARA, Journal for Critical

35. Organization Inquiry, 8(2), pp. 87-104 - Special Issue: Refugee and Migrant Integration in Developed Nations: The Discovery of Discourse (Sept 2009). Also see research on Project SafeCom: http://www.safecom.org.au/whatsnew.htm

Chris Sonn [email protected]  Sonn, C., & Quayle, A. (2012). Community psychology, critical theory and community development in Indigenous empowerment. In D. Bretherton & N. Balvin (Eds.), Peace Psychology in Australia (pp. 261-282). New York: Springer Science+Business Media. (contact authors direct for chapter)  Quayle, A., & Sonn, C.C. (2009). The construction of Muslims as “Other” in mainstream Australia’s print media. The Australian Community Psychologist, 21, 8-23.  Fisher, A., & Sonn, C. (2007). Sense of community and dynamics of inclusion- exclusion by receiving communities. The Australian Community Psychologist, 19, 26- 34.  Green, M. J., & Sonn, C.C. (2005). Examining discourses of whiteness and the potential for reconciliation. Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology, 15, 478–492.  Sonn, C.C., & Green, M.J. (2006). Disrupting the dynamics of oppression in intercultural research and practice. Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology, 16, 337-346.  Quayle, A., & Sonn, C.C. (2009). The construction of Muslims as “Other” in mainstream Australia’s print media. The Australian Community Psychologist, 21, 8-23.

Brian Spittles [email protected]  Spittles, B. (2004). ‘‘To be or not to be’: Deconstructing Indigenous Sustainability’. Social Alternatives. 23, 59-65.

Jon Stratton [email protected]  Jon Stratton and Nabeel Zuberi (eds). 'Black Popular Music in Britain Since 1945: An Introduction' by Jon Stratton and Nabeel Zuberi which is the Introduction to Jon Stratton and Nabeel Zuberi eds. Black Popular Music in Britain since 1945. Publisher site: http://www.ashgate.com/isbn/9781409469148  Stratton, Jon. (2015). The Sapphires were not the Australian Supremes: Neoliberalism, History and Pleasure in The Sapphires/ in Continuum: Journal of Media and Cultural Studies, vol 29, no 1. http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/10304312.2014.968526#preview  Stratton, J. (2011). Uncertain Lives: Culture, Race and Neoliberalism in Australia. Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars. Stratton, J. (2006). Two Rescues, One History: Everyday Racism in Australia. Social Identities, 12, 657-681.  Stratton, J. Dying To Come To Australia: Asylum Seekers, Tourists and Death’ in Suvendrini Perera Ed. Our Patch: Enacting Australian Sovereignty Post-2001, API-Network, 2007, pp. 167-196.

36. Avelie Stuart [email protected]  Anderson, J. R., Stuart, A., & Rossen, I. (2015). Not all negative: Macro justice principles predict positive attitudes towards asylum seekers in Australia. Australian Journal of Psychology

Mark Summers [email protected]  Summers, M. (2007). Rhetorically self-sufficient arguments in Western Australian parliamentary debates on Lesbian and Gay Law Reform. British Journal of Social Psychology, 46, 839–858.

Emma Thomas [email protected]  Thomas, E.F. & Louis, W.R. (2013). Doing democracy: The social psychological mobilization and consequences of collective action. Social Issues and Policy Review, 7, 173-200. DOI: 10.1111/j.1751-2409.2012.01047.x.  Thomas, E. F., Mavor, K. I., & McGarty, C. (2012). Social identities facilitate and encapsulate action-relevant constructs: A test of the social identity model of collective action. Group Processes and Intergroup Relations, 15, 75-88.  Mavor, K., Kanra, B., Thomas, E., Blink, C., & O’Brien, K. (2009). Diversity Dialogue Day. Unpublished report. Canberra: The Australian National University. [a community based research programme bringing together Muslim and non-Muslim Australians]

Brigid Trenerry [email protected];  Trenerry B. Paradies Y. Organizational assessment: An overlooked approach to managing diversity and addressing racism in the workplace. Journal of Diversity Management. 2012 7(1):11-26.  Trenerry B, Franklin H, & Paradies Y (2010): Review of audit and assessment tools, programs and resources in workplace settings to prevent race-based discrimination and support diversity. Victorian Heath Promotion Foundation (VicHealth), Carlton, Australia.

VicHealth (Peter Streker) [email protected]  VicHealth 2014, Findings from the 2013 survey of Victorians' attitudes to race and cultural diversity, Victorian Health Promotion Foundation, Melbourne, Australia. Retrieved from : http://www.vichealth.vic.gov.au/~/media/ResourceCentre/PublicationsandResour ces/Discrimination/LEAD/LEAD-community-attitudes-survey.ashx  Victorian Health Promotion Foundation (2013). Choosing to act: How Victorians can prevent race-based discrimination and support cultural diversity. Summary report, Victorian Health Promotion Foundation. The full report can be downloaded from: http://www.vichealth.vic.gov.au/bystander-discrimination  Victorian Health Promotion Foundation (2012). Mental health impacts of racial discrimination in Victorian Aboriginal communities. Experiences of Racism survey: A summary, Victorian Health Promotion Foundation. The summary can

37. be downloaded from http://www.vichealth.vic.gov.au/Publications/Freedom- from-discrimination/Mental-health-impacts-of-racial-discrimination-in-Victorian- Aboriginal-communities.aspx and the full report can be downloaded from: http://www.lowitja.org.au/lowitja-publishing/L023  Victorian Health Promotion Foundation (2012). Mental health impacts of racial discrimination in Victorian culturally and linguistically diverse communities. Experiences of Racism survey: a summary. Victorian Health Promotion Foundation. Both the summary and full report can be downloaded from: http://www.vichealth.vic.gov.au/Publications/Freedom-from- discrimination/Mental-health-impacts-of-racial-discrimination-in-culturally-and- linguistically-diverse-communities.aspx  Victorian Health Promotion Foundation (2009). Building on our strengths: a framework to reduce race-based discrimination and support diversity in Victoria. Summary report, Victorian Health Promotion Foundation.  Rees, S., & Pease, B. (2006). Refugee settlement, safety and wellbeing: Exploring domestic and family violence in refugee communities. Melbourne: Immigrant Women’s Domestic Violence Service Inc. [in partnership with Victorian Health Promotion Foundation]  Victorian Health Promotion Foundation (2006). Two steps forward, one step back: Community attitudes toward violence against women. Progress and challenges in creating safe and healthy environments for Victorian women: A summary of findings. Melbourne: Victorian Health Promotion Foundation.  Victorian Health Promotion Foundation (2007a). More than tolerance: Embracing diversity for health. Discrimination affecting migrant and refugee communities in Victoria, its health consequences, community attitudes and solutions: A summary report. Melbourne: Victorian Health Promotion Foundation.  Victorian Health Promotion Foundation (2007b). Preventing violence before it occurs: A framework and background paper to guide the primary prevention of violence against women in Victoria. Melbourne: Victorian Health Promotion Foundation.  Donovan, R., & Vlais, R. (2006). A review of communications components of anti-racism and pro-diversity social marketing/public education campaigns. Report to VicHealth, RJD Consulting Pty Ltd. http://www.vichealth.vic.gov.au/assets/contentFiles/Paper_1-Donovan_Communications_Marketing.pdf

Jessica Walton [email protected]  Walton J, Paradies Y, Priest N, Freeman L, Wertheim E. Fostering intercultural understanding through secondary school experiences of cultural immersion. International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education. 2015 28(4): 216-37.  Walton, J., Priest, N., Kowal, E., White, F., Brickwood, K., Fox, B., and Paradies, Y. (2014). Talking culture? Egalitarianism, color-blindness and racism in Australian elementary schools. Teaching and Teacher Education 39: 112-122.

38.  Walton, J, Priest N, and Paradies Y. Identifying and developing effective approaches to foster intercultural understanding in schools. Intercultural Education 2013 24(3): 181-194.  Walton J, Priest N, Paradies Y. It depends how you’re saying it: The complexities of everyday racism. International Journal of Conflict and Violence. 2013 7(1): 74- 90.

Devorah Wainer [email protected]  Wainer, D. (2010). Beyond the wire: Levinas vis-à-vis Villawood. PhD thesis University of Technology Sydney. Available from http://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/scholarly-works/handle/2100/1207

Iain Walker [email protected]  LeBlanc, J., Beaton, A. M., & Walker, I. (2015). The Downside of Being Up: A New Look at Group Relative Gratification and Traditional Prejudice. Social Justice Research, 28(1), 143-167.  Walker, I. (1994). Attitudes to minorities: survey evidence of Western Australians' Attitudes to Aborigines, Asians, and Women. Australian Journal of Psychology, 46, 137-143.  Walker, I. (2001). Changes in prejudice against Aboriginal Australians. In M. Augoustinos & K. J. Reynolds (Eds.), Understanding prejudice, racism and social conflict (pp. 24-42). London: Sage.  Walker, I., & Crogan, M. (1998). Academic performance, prejudice, and the Jigsaw Classroom: New pieces to the puzzle. Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology, 8, 381-393.

Sue Watt [email protected]  Greenhalgh, E. & Watt, S.E. (2014). Preferences for consistency and value dissimilarities in dehumanization and prejudice toward asylum seekers in Australia. European Journal of Social Psychology. Published online, September 27. DOI: 10.1002/ejsp.2066, http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/enhanced/doi/10.1002/ejsp.2066  Watt, S. E., & Larkin, C. (2010). Prejudiced people perceive more community support for their views: The role of own, media and peer attitudes in perceived consensus. Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 40(3), 710–731.

 Maio, G.R, Haddock, G., Watt, S.E., & Hewstone, M. (2008). Implicit measures in applied contexts: An illustrative example of antiracism advertising. In R. Petty, R. Fazio & P. Brinol (Eds.) Attitudes: Insights from the Implicit Measures (pp. 327-357). Psychology Press: New York.  Watt, S.E., Maio, G.R., Rees K., & Hewstone, M. (2007). Functions of attitudes towards ethnic groups: Effects of level of abstraction. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 43, 441–449  Watt, S.E., Maio, G.R., Haddock, G. & Johnson, B. T. (2008). Attitude functions in persuasion: Matching, involvement, self-affirmation, and hierarchy. In

39. Attitudes and attitude change (pp. 189-211). Prislin, R. & W. Crano (Eds.). Frontiers of Social Psychology Series. Psychology Press.

Fiona White [email protected] White, F. A., Abu-Rayya, H. M., Bliuc, A-M, & Faulkner, N. (2015). Emotion expression and intergroup bias reduction between Muslims and Christians: Long- term Internet contact. Computers in Human Behavior. 53, 435-442. White, F. A., Harvey, L., & Abu-Rayya. H. M. (2015). Improving intergroup relations in the Internet age: A critical review. Review of General Psychology, 19, 129-139. White, F. A., Harvey, L., & Verrelli, S. (2015). Including both voices: a new bidirectional framework for understanding and improving intergroup relations (invited contribution). Australian Psychologist, 50, 421- 433.  White, F. A., Abu-Rayya, H. M., & Weitzel, C. (2014). Achieving twelve- months of intergroup bias reduction: The dual identity-electronic contact (DIEC) experiment. International Journal of Intercultural Relations, 38, 158-163.  White, F.A., & Abu-Rayya, H.M. (2012). A dual identity-electronic contact (DIEC) experiment promoting short- and long-term intergroup harmony, Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 48, 597-608.  Abu-Rayya, H., & White. F.A. (2010). Acculturation orientations and religious identity as predictors of Anglo-Australians' attitudes towards Australian Muslims. International Journal of Intercultural Relations, 34, 592-599.  White, F. A., Charles, M. A., & Nelson. J. K. (2008). The role of persuasive arguments in changing affirmative action attitudes and expressed behavior in higher education. Journal of Applied Psychology, 93, 1271-1286.  McGrane, J. A., & White, F. A. (2007). Differences in Anglo and Asian Australians' explicit and implicit prejudice and the attenuation of their in-group bias. Asian Journal of Social Psychology, 10, 204-210.  White, F. A., & Gleitzman, M. (2006). An examination of family socialisation processes as moderators of racial prejudice transmission between adolescents and their parents. Journal of Family Studies, 12, 247-260.

Amanda Wise [email protected]  Wise, A., & Ali, J. (2008). Muslim-Australians and Local Government: Grassroots strategies to improve relations between Muslim and non-Muslim- Australians. Centre for Research on Social Inclusion. Macquarie University, Sydney.

Samina Yasmeen [email protected]  Yasmeen, S. (2008). Understanding Muslim identities: From perceived relative exclusion to inclusion. Perth, Western Australia: University of Western Australia [Commissioned by OMI and DIAC under National Action Plan] Anna Ziersch [email protected]

40.  Browne-Yung K, Ziersch A, Baum F, Gallaher G (2013). Aboriginal Australians’ experience of social capital and its relevance to health and wellbeing in urban settings, Social Science and Medicine 97:20-28  Osborne K, Ziersch A, Gallaher G, Baum F. (2012) Australian Aboriginal Urban Residents’ Satisfaction with Living in Their Neighbourhood: Perceptions of the Neighbourhood Socio-cultural Environment and Individual Socio-demographic Factors, Urban Studies 49(11) 2459–2477  Ziersch AM, Gallaher G, Baum F, Bentley M. (2011). Responding to racism: Insights on how racism can damage health from an urban study of Australian Aboriginal people. Social Science and Medicine. 73(7): 1045-1053  Ziersch AM, Gallaher G, Baum FE, Bentley M. (2011). Racism, social resources and mental health for Aboriginal people living in Adelaide. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health, 35(3):231-237

Miscellaneous  Australian Human Rights Commission (2014). Tackling racism in Australia: A unit of work for the Australian Curriculum Health and Physical Education, Years 9 and 10. Australian Human Rights Commission. Sydney Australia Also see: four resources in this series – History year 6 and 10 and Health/PE years 5-6 and 9-10. All available here if you or others are interested: https://www.humanrights.gov.au/education/human-rights-school-classroom  Australian Human Rights Commission (2012). National anti-racism strategy Consultation Report. Australian Human Rights Commission. Sydney Australia  Australian Multicultural Advisory Council. (2011). The People of Australia: Australia’s Multicultural Policy. Canberra: The Australian Multicultural Advisory Council. Retrieved from: http://www.immi.gov.au/media/publications/multicultural/pdf_doc/people-of-australia- multicultural-policy-booklet.pdf  Australians for Native Title and Reconciliation (2010). A Better Way: Success Stories in Aboriginal community - Control in the Northern Territory. ANTaR: Sydney, New South Wales.  Australian Human Rights Commission (2010). In our words – African Australians: A review of human rights and social inclusion issues: Retrieved from: http://www.humanrights.gov.au/africanaus/review/index.html

 Bean, R. (2006). The effectiveness of cross-cultural training in the Australian context. Canberra: Department of Immigration and Multicultural Affairs. http://www.immi.gov.au/media/publications/research/cross_cultural/index.htm  Biddle, N. (2013) CAEPR Indigenous Population Project 2011 Census Papers: Paper 13: Socioeconomic outcomes. Centre for Aboriginal Economic Policy Research, ANU: Canberra.  Boatright-Horowitz, S.L. (2005). Teaching Antiracism in a Large Introductory Psychology Class: A Course Module and Its Evaluation. Journal of Black Studies, 36, 34-51

41.  Case, K.A. (2007). Raising white privilege awareness and reducing racial prejudice: Assessing diversity course effectiveness. In Teaching of Psychology, 34, 231-235.  Chang, Charis (2015) “Why Reclaim Australia is on the rise and how we can stop it (Interview with Andrew Jakubowicz)”, News.com.au, 22 July,accessed 22 July at http://www.news.com.au/national/politics/why-reclaim-australia-is-on-the- rise-and-how-we-can-stop-it/story-fns0jze1- 1227450646363?sv=f5a7535681bd172ae3eb9986482a8ebe.  Commissioner for Children and Young People (August 2015) Aboriginal Children and Young People Speak Out  Commissioner for Children and Young People (August 2015) This is me – Aboriginal young people’s stories  Eureka Research (1998) The Anti-Racism Campaign: Qualitative and Quantitative Research Report to the Department of Immigration and Multicultural Affairs, Canberra (released under FOI October 2011). http://culturaldiversity.net.au/index.php?option=com_docman&task=cat_v iew&gid=12&Itemid=35  Evans, C. & Lundy, K. (2011). Response to the Recommendations of the Australian Multicultural Advisory Council in The People of Australia. Canberra: Australian Government. Retrieved from: http://www.immi.gov.au/media/publications/multicultural/pdf_doc/amac-response-to- recommendations.pdf  Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission. (2004). IsmaU - Listen: National consultations on eliminating prejudice against Arab and Muslim Australians. Sydney, Australia: HREOC  Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission. (2008). Living Spirit: A dialogue on human rights and responsibilities. Sydney, Australia: HREOC  Issues Deliberation Australia (2007). Australia deliberates: Muslims and non- Muslims in Australia – Final report summary. http://www.ida.org.au/UserFiles/File/AUSTRALIA%20DELIBERATES%20- %20FINAL%20REPORT%20SUMMARY.pdf  Jackson, Elizabeth (2015) "Fears anti-Islam and far-right groups are gaining momentum in recent months (Interview with Andrew Jakubowicz)” ABC Radio National AM, 18 July, accessed 22 July at http://www.abc.net.au/am/content/2015/s4276211.htm .  Johnson, L.M., Antle, B.F., & Barbee (2009). Addressing disproportionality and disparity in child welfare: Evaluation of an anti-racism training for community service providers. Children and Youth Services Review, doi:10.1016/j.childyouth.2009.01.004  Markus, A. (2014). Mapping social cohesion: The Scanlon Foundation Surveys national report. Retrieved: http://monash.edu/mapping-population/  Lenton, A. (2008). After anti-racism? European Journal of Cultural Studies, 11, 311-331.  Pew Research Centre (2008). Unfavorable views of both Jews and Muslims increase in Europe. http://pewresearch.org/pubs/955/unfavorable-views-of-both- jews-and-muslims-increase-in-europe

42.  Pon, G. (2009). Cultural competency as new racism: An ontology of forgetting. Journal of Progressive Human Services, 20, 59–71.  Refugee Council of Australia and the Department of Immigration and Citizenship (2010). Economic civil and social contributions of refugees and humanitarian entries. Unpublished document.  Reconciliation Australia (2009). Australian Reconciliation Barometer: Comparing the attitudes of Indigenous people and Australians overall. http://www.reconciliation.org.au/i-cms.isp?page=843  Refugee Council of Australia (2009). Amplifying the voices of young refugees. http://www.refugeecouncil.org.au/docs/current/Young_Refugees_report.pdf  Strabac, Z., & Listhaug, O. (2008). Anti-Muslim prejudice in Europe: A multilevel analysis of survey data from 30 countries. Journal of Social Science Research, 37, 268-286.  Frankland, R., Bamblett, M., Lewis, P. & Trotter, R. (2010) This is ‘Forever Business’: A Framework for Maintaining and Restoring Cultural Safety in Aboriginal Victoria. Policy and research report for the Victorian Aboriginal Child Care Agency: Melbourne.  GetUp & Edmund Rice Centre (2012). Refugee and asylum seeker policy: A third way. Australia: Sydney.  Thomson N, MacRae A, Brankovich J, Burns J, Catto M, Gray C, Levitan L, Maling C, Potter C, Ride K , Stumpers S, Urquhart B (2012). Overview of Australian Indigenous health status, 2011. Retrieved [access date] from http://www.healthinfonet.ecu.edu.au/health-facts/overviews  Andreas Zick, Beate Küpper, Andreas Hövermann (2011). Intolerance, Prejudice and Discrimination: A European Report. Forum: Berlin. Retrieved: http://library.fes.de/pdf-files/do/07908-20110311.pdf

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