2022 Joint Winners: Marg Rogers et al. and Ian Michael & Chris Isaacs
Marg Rogers et al. 'Child and Family Resilience Programs children's literature project'
Marg Roger's et al. project produced a suite of twelve free, online research-based children’s storybooks created from the narratives of Australian children and their families from the defence and veteran community. The books build children’s resilience to deal with the stresses of military family life or when their parent gives their physical/mental health in service. This is the first time Australian young children’s narratives from defence/veteran families have been voiced, enabling them to see their lives reflected in young children’s literature. This builds children’s sense of identity and belonging.
Ian Michael & Chris Isaacs York
Ian & Chris's project is a play titled 'York' that is set in and around an abandoned hospital in York, on Ballardong Nyoongar country. This epic truth-telling play blends humour and horror to uncover our buried histories. Traversing multiple eras and inspired by 200 years of real accounts, this daring new work explores how stories are told – and who tells them. York was Shortlisted for in Nick Enright's Prize for Playwriting as part o the NSW Premier's Literary Awards 2022. York is a raw, resonating new work written by two incredibly talented local artists Ian Michael (Wilman Nyoongar) and Chris Isaacs.
2022 Social Sciences Week discussion between the then CHASS President, Dan Woodman, and one of the 2021 winners of the CHASS Distinctive Works Prize, Dr Carla Pascoe Leahy.
2022 CHASS Distinctive Works Award winner Marg Rogers in conversation with Prof Dan Woodman, the then CHASS President, for Social Sciences Week.
2021 Joint Winners: Carla Pascoe Leahy and Christiana Aloneftis
Carla Pascoe Leahy
My project has charted the changing experience of first-time motherhood in Australia since 1945. By creating and analysing a new archive of interviews, it has established new understanding of what becoming a mother feels like, what supports new mothers need, and whether the experience has become more challenging over time.
Carla's Bio
Project outputs
Christiana Aloneftis

My goal is to equip Australian opera singers with the necessary language resources to compete on the international stage by providing quality, accessible, industry-specific coaching 1:1 and via live group masterclass, online. The CHASS Scholarship will support me in organising an online Masterclass for disadvantaged Australian singers who would like to re-invest in their artistic careers post-covid. This type of training is deeply lacking in Australian tertiary institutions and must become a stable in the continued training of singers from student to professional levels. As both an active singer and coach, I am able to fully communicate and embody the concepts I impart in my singers and connect declamatory technique and diction theory with a simple, practical application. I currently work in theatres and with singers from theatres which underlines the relevance of this training. It is not purely academic. The training I am offering is FROM the industry FOR the industry.
Christiana's Bio
Christiana's Website
2020
Robyn Gulliver

The Campaign Explorer database and citizen science project is a Australia’s first ever large scale database of environmental collective action, designed to help activists and researchers design more effective grassroots activism to address our environmental challenges. It has two project components. The first is a dataset hosted by the University of Queensland on an OmekaS website platform (https://enviro-activism.uqdhss.cloud.edu.au/s/emap/page/about). The database is available for download by researchers and activists and includes information on over 1,600 environmental groups, 900 environmental campaigns and 195 climate change campaign outcomes. The second component is the citizen science platform, found at http://www.activismresearchhub.org/campaignexplorer/, which offers a range of tasks and projects for volunteers to contribute to the project.
These two components enable capturing environmental advocacy history and practice which has gone unrecorded in the past. The data collected also includes historical campaign archives, spatial data to enable mapping of environmental groups and campaigns, and the identification of network ties between groups. The innovative development of a citizen science component enables new data and insights to be added every day. To date, the data has informed a range of academic papers, as well as diverse outputs such as ArcGIS storymaps, Twitter stories and activist reports.