Jeannette Hope is an Australian archaeologist who has worked extensively in Western New South Wales. She is a former editor and executive of the journal of the Australian Archaeological Association,[1] and has published extensively on that region as well as issues of gender in archaeology.[2] She did her Bachelor of Science and PhD at Monash University and has been an honorary research associate at the University of Sydney.[3] She also has prepared the seminal work on the Aboriginal fish traps at Brewarrina, New South Wales.[4]
Publications
- The People of the Paroo River: Frederick Bonney’s Photographs by Jeannette Hope and Robert Lindsay. Department of Environment, Climate Change and Water NSW, Sydney South, 2012[5]
- ‘'Cultural Heritage of the Lake Victoria Rangelands’', River Junction Research. Unpublished report with Shawcross W, Orchard K and Quinlan D 2002, for the Lake Victoria Rangelands Management Action Plan, Wentworth, NSW.
- Lake Victoria: finding the balance—a response to the competing interests of cultural heritage, environment and resource use, Background Report No. 1, Murray-Darling Basin Commission, Canberra. 1998.
- Redefining Archaeology: Feminist Perspectives: Feminist Perspectives, Research Papers in Archaeology and Natural History No 29, contributors Mary et al. Casey, Sharon Wellfare, Jeannette Hope and others[6]
- "Aboriginal Burials and Shell Middens at Snaggy Bend and Other Sites on the Central Murray River" Australian Archaeology No. 20 (Jun., 1985), pp. 68–89 by Peter Clark and Jeannette Hope[7]
References
- ↑ Former Editors of Australian Archaeology
- ↑ Hope, Jeannette, People and organisations, Trove
- ↑ The University of Sydney, Faculty of Arts, Undergraduate Handbook, 1997
- ↑ Brewarrina Aboriginal Fisheries Conservation Plan, with Gary Vines and with contributions from Peter Dargin Prepared for the Brewarrina Aboriginal Cultural Museum 1994
- ↑ Aboriginal History Volume 36, 2012
- ↑ Encyclopedia of Australian Science 2010
- ↑ Clark, Peter; Hope, Jeannette (1985). "Aboriginal burials and shell middens at Snaggy Bend and other sites on the Central Murray River". Australian Archaeology (20): 68–89.
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