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Batchelor Institute would like to acknowledge and pay respect to the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander sovereign people of the lands on which our campuses are located. As we share our knowledge, teaching and learning and engage in research practices within this Institution and/or conduct business with a variety of external agencies and organisations, we must always pay respect to the sovereign status of our hosts. May their Ancestors always be remembered and honoured, their Elders listened to and respected, all members treated with dignity and fairness — in the present and well into the future.

We also acknowledge and pay respect to the knowledge embedded forever with our hosts, custodianship of country and the binding relationship they have with the land. Batchelor Institute extends this acknowledgment and expression of respect to all sovereign custodians — past, present and emerging. By expressing Acknowledgement of Country we encourage all to extend and practice respect to all First Nations people wherever their lands are located.

Please read this important information
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Users are warned that there may be words and descriptions which may be culturally sensitive and which might not normally be used in certain public or community contexts. Terms and annotations, which reflect the author’s attitude or that of the period in which the item was written, may be considered inappropriate today in some circumstances.
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Users of the website should be aware that, in some Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Communities, seeing images of deceased persons in photographs, film and books or hearing them in recordings may cause sadness or distress and in some cases, offend against strongly held cultural prohibitions.
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Materials included in this website may be subject to access conditions imposed by Indigenous communities and/or depositors. Users are advised that access to some materials may be subject to these terms and conditions which the Institute is required to maintain
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Arne ingkerreke apurtelhe-ileme - The life and work of Veronica Perrurle Dobson
02 August 2024
1 minute read

Batchelor Institute Centre for Australian Languages and Linguistics (CALL) is partnering with Language Data Commons of Australia (LDaCA) to support a project titled Arne ingkerreke apurtelhe-ileme (Gathering all the things together). The aim of the project is to create an archive based around the prolific life’s work of Veronica Perrurle Dobson (AM).  For well over four decades Veronica has worked with linguists, scientists and with Aboriginal elders from Central Australia. Her work spans many inter-related fields – language documentation and teaching, lexicography, interpreting, ethnobiology and land management. Her concern is that the fruits of her work are looked after and accessible for future generations. In June 2024 the team met in Mparntwe/Alice Springs to begin the project.

Angela Harrison (Batchelor Institute CALL), Camille Dobson (Batchelor Institute CALL), Veronica Dobson, Jennifer Green (The University of Melbourne), Ben Foley (University of Queensland) Photo: Charlee-Anne Ah Chee