IWF Indigenous Honours Scholarship
Supporting Indigenous Students in Water Research and Policy at ANU.
Call to action
About
The IWF Indigenous Honours Scholarship supports Indigenous students to pursue an Honours year focusing on water related research. The IWF recognises the value of water from environmental, cultural, emotional and economic perspectives. We also believe that lasting solutions to water related challenges require interdisciplinary action. For these reasons, we will consider applications from any field provided there is a clear connection to water. Through the scholarship, we hope to amplify Indigenous voices in water policy, planning, management and justice.
The Award includes a stipend of $10,000 plus additional benefits such as provision for field work travel and the ability to apply to a cultural consideration fund.
For more information, including the Conditions of Award, please visit the ANU Scholarships portal.
Hmalan Hunter-Xenie, an ANU Honours graduate, together with her family: Marita Hunter, Anita Hunter, Hmalan Hunter-Xénié, Widro Xénié and Rosie Baird. Photo by ANU.
How to apply
To apply, visit the ANU Scholarships portal.
Please note, to be eligible for the IWF Indigenous Honours Scholarship, you must already be enrolled in an Honours program at ANU. Please refer to your chosen program for admission deadlines.
Projects
Students may nominate any water-related topic that they would like to pursue. The following projects are available to interested students.
ANU First Nations Portfolio Water Initiatives
The successful Honours scholarship recipient is welcome to participate in, and observe, the proceedings of the First Nations Water Roundtable in March 2023 and subsequent Murru waaruu Seminar scheduled for April 2023. These events follow on from the Marramarra murru (creating pathways) First Nations Economic Development Symposium in June 2022. These dialogues will provide the student with direct exposure to critically important issues and priorities from a First Nations perspective and give some definition to potential research topics, establish possible links to communities and organisations, and inform the structure of their planned research activity.
CSIRO Research Project
Waterbird ecology in the Murray-Darling Basin: Information for environmental water and wetland management. Supervised by Dr Heather McGinness
The successful applicant will work with a small team of CSIRO scientists who are discovering new and exciting information about how waterbirds move across Australia, what waterbirds need to survive and maintain their populations, and the implications for management and policy. A range of potential tasks are available, that will be discussed and selected from based on the scholar’s interests.
CSIRO Research Project
Exploring shifts in basin scale hydrological connectivity in the Murray-Darling Basin. Supervised by Dr Ashmita Sengupta and Dr Danial Stratford
Basin-wide hydrological connectivity is integral to a healthy ecosystem. There are two essential components that define hydrological connectivity, temporal and spatial flow variability in the river channel and associated floodplain/wetland system and how the system has changed due to constraints, such as weirs and dams. The successful applicant will engage with a team of hydrologists and ecologists to explore shifts in connectivity patterns in the basin over three decades. While there are a range of tasks that the applicant can take on, inclination to learn basic GIS skills/ or prior knowledge will be ideal for this project.
If you would like to discuss these opportunities please contact the Indigenous Scholars Program Coordinator, Hayley Primrose.