Dr Sarah Bourke
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About
Sarah Bourke (she/her) is a Research Fellow with Yardhura Walani, the National Centre for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Wellbeing Research. Sarah is a Gamilaroi, Jaru, Gidja woman born and raised on Ngunnawal and Ngambri Country in Canberra. She completed her undergraduate studies at ANU in biological anthropology and psychology before being award a John Monash Scholarship and a Roberta Sykes Scholarship to study for an MPhil in Medical Anthropology with Keble College at the University of Oxford in the UK. She was then awarded a Roberta Sykes Scholarship and a Chevening Scholarship to continue on at Oxford for a DPhil in Anthropology at St. John's College, graduating in 2021. Her doctoral thesis used an Indigenist research framework to ethnographically examine the historical, social, and political factors which influenced the development of Mayi Kuwayu, the National Study of Aboriginal and Torres Strait islander Wellbeing, and its emphasis on measuring cultural determinants of health.
Sarah has expertise in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health and wellbeing research and policy, decolonising and Indigenous research methodologies, and qualitative methods. Her research explores Indigenous philosophies of health and wellbeing and what it means to live a ‘good life’ from Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander and other Indigenous perspectives.
Affiliations
- Yardhura Walani, Researcher
Research interests
- Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health and wellbeing
- Social and cultural determinants of health
- Philosophies of wellbeing
- Medical anthropology
- Indigenous research methodologies