Robert Wolfgramm

Robert Wolfgramm (PhD Sociology and Anthropology, LaTrobe University 1994) is a Fijian-born Australian citizen who lives in Ringwood, east of Melbourne. He completed a an MA in sociology on the Seventh-Day Adventisms American founder, Ellen White and his doctoral dissertation examined the Fijian ethnic self. He taught for 24 years at university level and in 2004 returned to Fiji to be editor of the English-language Fiji Daily Post. The newspaper ceased publication in 2009 as a consequence of the 2006 military coup. Since then he has returned to Australia, continued to write and maintain involvement in various civic projects, including the publication of Prisoner 302 the memoire of Laisenia Qarase (1941-2020), the Fijian Prime Minister from 2000-2006.

 

Recent articles by Robert Wolfgramm

The Voice: the game-changer everyone yearns for?

The Voice: the game-changer everyone yearns for?

Against the background of reconciliatory legal and political gestures from Canberra over the past 30 years, and in view of the Voice being proposed as an organic instrument 'from the heart of Aboriginal Australia (rather than a top-down 'advice' - device of bureaucratic convenience), it may well be the game-changer everyone yearns for.

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