Diane Austin-Broos


Diane Joyce Austin-Broos is an anthropologist from Australia. She is a Professor Emeritus at the University of Sydney; her major research areas are Jamaica and Central Australia.

Early life and education

Austin-Broos was born in Melbourne in 1946, and attended Hartwell State School and the Methodist Ladies' College in Kew. She won a scholarship to the Australian National University, where she studied philosophy and oriental studies. She also complete a master's degree in philosophy, followed by a short time in a research position for Professor Henry Mayer at the University of Sydney. In 1969 she won a scholarship to the University of Chicago and completed a doctorate in anthropology there in 1974. Austin-Broos returned to Australia the same year.

Career

Austin-Broos lectured in the Department of Anthropology and Sociology at Monash University in Melbourne for over five years; in 1980 moved to a position in anthropology at the University of Sydney. She became an associate professor in 1985 and a professor in 1995, a position she held until her retirement in 2008. She was then appointed professor emerita.
While teaching at the University of Sydney, Austin-Broos introduced two major courses, on social change and the history of anthropological thought, to the anthropology curriculum. She also led a redesign of the first year course and supervised doctoral theses on a wide range of topics.
Austin-Broos is an elected fellow of the Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia and a past president of the Australian Anthropological Society and the Australian Caribbean Scholars Association. Her 2011 book A Different Inequality was a finalist in the Australian Human Rights Commission’s Human Rights Award for Literature. She is a fellow of the Royal Society of New South Wales.

Publications

Jamaica Genesis: Religion and the Politics of Moral Orders, The University of Chicago Press Arrernte Present, Arrernte Past: Invasion, Violence, and Imagination in Indigenous Central Australia, The University of Chicago Press A Different Inequality: The Politics of Debate About Remote Aboriginal Australia Allen & Unwin