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个人简介
Bio:
Ani Landau-Ward teaches in the Bachelor of International Studies (BIS), and is a Researcher in the Centre for Urban Research (CUR), at RMIT University in Melbourne/Naarm, on the unceded lands of the Kulin Nations. She is currently pursuing her Ph.D., holds an MA in International and Community Development, and undergrad study in the Built Environment (Architecture). She has a number of years of interdisciplinary experience in research at RMIT. This academic practice is enriched by an extensive background of professional and practical work in housing justice advocacy; participatory architectural design; community/social centre organising; and land conservation. A genuinely transdisciplinary scholar her primary research focus and expertise is in the relationships between law, administrative governance, land and dwelling, with a specific focus on instruments of property and ownership.
Teaching:
Alongside her research activities Ms Landau-Ward has tutored, lectured, and course coordinated in many undergraduate courses in the School of Global Urban and Social Studies at RMIT, with a particular focus on the Bachelor of International Studies (BIS) program. This has included teaching introductory courses in sociology, critical social theory, globalisation, intercultural communication and social research methods, as well as more advanced courses in Digital Sociology and Globalisation, Global Governance and International Law, and International/Global development theory and practice. Her teaching is a major focus of her academic life and she considers her responsibilities in the classroom as an educator and mentor very seriously indeed, striving to foster intellectually challenging, and highly inclusive learning communities. She has an open door, and inbox, policy for students, so... feel free to email!
Research:
Ms Landau-Ward has worked collaboratively with teams in the Centre for Urban Research (CUR) and with associated communities of practice, on research projects that have focussed on; interrogating the policy and governance implications of digital transformations in the housing sector in Melbourne; seeking pathways towards improved opportunities for Indigenous land governance through local government planning mechanisms; scoping and mapping the policy environment that obligates universities to take Indigenous Sovereignty more seriously in their governance and operations; and, critically mapping the conundrums of justice and property relations vis a vis ‘urban greening’ practices in cities.
Her individual scholarly research is at a different scale. It focuses on the transnational politics of land and property administration, as taken up in the name of ‘development’. Especially in transnational regulation, such as in the development of international standards, multilateral agreements brokered in the UN system, and the emergence of new forms of private interest in regulatory spaces associated with land and property rights. Her Masters research analysed the history (genealogy) and promotion of property rights institutions in the UN system. Her current PhD project moves to critically examine recent technological changes, and the role of data, in transnational land administration practices and their governance. Broadly, she brings to this work a critical development studies and international relations lens, with attention to world histories, ongoing dynamics of decolonisation and their manifestations in international law, and the changing political economies of global inequality. Methodologically this current work utilises frameworks developed in Science and Technology Studies (STS) and Jurisprudence of Jurisdiction, and is situated as 'Law and Society' scholarship. Conceptually the project engages especially with philosophies of relationality and temporality, seeking to interrogate the new and renewed ways that the materialities of land and housing relations interrelate with the creation of international administrative and regulatory instruments, in an uneven world shaped by legacies of imperial and colonial order.
Pubs:
Ms Landau-Ward’s research has been presented internationally at the annual meetings of The Association for Law, Property, and Society (ALPS), and the International Academic Association on Planning, Law, and Property Rights (PLPR), as well as in numerous other academic forums. She has contributed scholarly writing to the volumes; Springer Global Encyclopedia of Public Administration, Public Policy, and Governance, and Urban Asias: Essays on Futurity Past and Present with Jovis: Berlin. As well as in academic Journals, such as; New Zealand Journal of Asian Studies; and the two Taylor and Francis Journals Australian Geographer and Planning Theory and Practice. She has recently published a co-authored book with colleagues in global studies entitled Monsters of Modernity: Global Icons for our Critical Condition (2019), with the ethical academic publisher Kismet Press: Leeds.
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Global Encyclopedia of Public Administration, Public Policy, and Governancepp.2675-2684, (2018)
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