Barbara Glowczewski (Dr and Pr) is an anthropologist specializing in Australian Indigenous issues, strategies of recognition and networks shared with other Indigenous peoples and populations displaced by colonisation. She has been working in Cental Australia on creation through dream and art of rituals and narratives with the Warlpiri people from Lajamanu (1979-ongoing), in the Kimberley on historical conflicts, alliances and heritage reconstruction of the Yawuru people and their neighbours (1991-2004) and in Townsville on the 2004 death in custody inquest and committal hearing of people arrested for riot on Palm Island (2004-2012). Author of 15 books, numerous articles and multimedia productions. She has a Research Tenure at the Laboratoire d'Anthropologie Sociale (CNRS/EHESS/Collège de France) since 1991. She teaches and supervises PhD candidates at EHESS and joint degrees with JCU, in Australia. Her team and the TransOceanik international program she established for the CNRS with Ton Otto (JCU) looks at returning anthropological research in innovative experimental forms to enhance the creative singularity of populations which have been minorised, in situation of historical or current social, economical or natural disasters. Was a guest of CAPES in Brazil (February-July 2013) for a teaching and research program Transversalidades Antropológicas: UFSC (Florianopolis), USP & PUC-SP (São Paulo), UFRGS (Porto Alegre), UnB (Brasilia), UFPEL (Pelotas), UFG (Goiânia), UFAM (Manaus), UFRN (Natal), UFPE (Recife), UFSCAR (São Carlos). Member of several editorial committes (Australian Aboriginal Studies, Anthrovision, Deleuze Studies, Mondes contemporains, Multitudes, Vibrant ABA).