What we offer
Each engagement is tailored. We do not offer off-the-shelf solutions to questions that require genuine reckoning.
01
Strategic policy advice
Designed to help inform and shape work that will improve Indigenous-settler relations, including understanding the transformational potential of treaty. Drawing on Victoria's treaty process and comparative international experience.
02
Organisational reconciliation
Helping universities, not-for-profits, and corporations embed genuine reconciliation into their operations, governance, and culture — beyond performative Reconciliation Action Plans.
03
Education & training
Custom programs addressing critical issues in Indigenous-settler relations including anti-racism, understanding settler colonialism, and the potential for more just relations, tailored for public servants and institutional leaders.
04
Facilitation & dialogue
Designing and facilitating dialogue processes for deeply divided communities, institutions, and sectors. Grounded in comparative work across Australia, South Africa, Northern Ireland, and Indonesia.
05
Thought leadership
Keynote addresses, media commentary, board advisory, and expert witness services for public inquiries and legal proceedings on matters of Indigenous policy and settler colonial history.
06
International advisory
Cross-jurisdictional expertise for Canada, New Zealand, South Africa, and the United States, drawing on an extensive network of global Indigenous policy scholars and comparative research.
Who we work with
State and federal governments
Departments and policy teams navigating the transition to treaty and truth-telling.
Universities & research institutions
Institutions confronting what decolonisation means in practice for curriculum, governance, and research relationships.
Corporations & industry
Companies — particularly in resources and infrastructure — navigating free, prior and informed consent and genuine community relationships.
Foundations & philanthropies
Funders seeking to understand how to resource Indigenous-led work effectively and without paternalism.
Not-for-profit sector
Advocacy organisations, legal services, and community groups seeking to shift from ally-ship in name to accountability in practice.
International organisations
Governments and NGOs in Canada, New Zealand, South Africa, and the US seeking comparative perspectives on settler-state transformation.
Start a conversation
If you are a non-Indigenous institution seeking to engage seriously with what a transformation in Indigenous-settler relations requires of you, we would welcome the conversation.
Engagements range from a single strategic briefing to multi-year advisory relationships. We work with a small number of clients at any one time to ensure depth of attention