- Author:
Joanna Siekiera
- E-mail:
joanna.axe@gmail.com
- Institution:
Warsaw School of Economics (Poland) & Victoria University in Wellington (New Zealand)
- Year of publication:
2016
- Source:
Show
- Pages:
408-410
- DOI Address:
http://dx.doi.org/10.15804/ppsy2016032
- PDF:
ppsy/45/ppsy2016032.pdf
The 8th Conference of the Australia, New Zealand and Oceania Research Association Rapa Nui – Between Two Cultures.
Kraków, (3 December, 2015), The Australia, New Zealand and Oceania Research Association (ANZORA).
- Author:
Joanna Siekiera
- E-mail:
joanna.siekiera@uib.no
- Institution:
University of Bergen (Norway)
- ORCID:
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0125-9121
- Year of publication:
2020
- Source:
Show
- Pages:
223-226
- DOI Address:
https://doi.org/10.15804/ppsy2020416
- PDF:
ppsy/49-4/ppsy2020416.pdf
The paper reports the conference on Australia, organized by the Polish research association based in Cracow (Australia, New Zealand and Oceania Research Association, ANZORA). The 2020 edition was already the 12th conference entitled Australia in the Time of Crisis: Climactic, Cultural, Economic, and Political Solutions. This year, the co-organizing unit was the University of Łódź, as every year, ANZORA promotes Pacific Studies at different Polish universities. The hosting faculty was the Faculty of International and Political Studies, with its Chair of British Studies and the Commonwealth Countries, as well as the “Australian Studies” Scientific Association. The panelists came from numerous disciplines and eight academic institutions from Poland and three from abroad. In total, there were 21 presenters: young scholars, experienced academics, independent researchers as well as enthusiasts of the Australian continent. Besides the University of Bergen in Norway, foreign speakers represented the Université de Bourgogne in France and the Australian Embassy in Poland. Three diplomatic missions have taken the honorary patronage over the event. Those were the Australian Embassy, the Embassy of New Zealand, and the Polish Embassy in Australia. The supporting institutions were the University of Bergen, the Polish Geopolitical Society, and the Academy of European Careers Foundation.