Australian Academy of the Humanities

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The Australian Academy of the Humanities was established by Royal Charter in 1969 to advance scholarship and public interest in the humanities in Australia. To this end, the Academy: supports excellent humanities research through conferences, awards, and the facilitation of major project initiatives; supports the wide diffusion of humanities research findings through publication subsidies and media promotion; provides expert advice to government, industry, the media, and the community on matters concerning the humanities; builds and maintains collaborations with other bodies concerned with national cultural prosperity; and builds and maintains relations and exchanges with allied international bodies.

The Academy comprises a Fellowship of over 400 of the most influential humanists in or profoundly associated with Australia. The approved abbreviation for a Fellow of the Academy is FAHA. The Academy is governed by a Council of Fellows and operated by a Secretariat. It is an independent not-for-profit organisation partly funded by the Australian government. It is a registered tax-deductible gift recipient.

The Academy’s mandate extends across ten clusters of disciplines that serve as the Fellowship’s electoral sections. These are:

Election to the Academy takes place at the Annual General Meeting, following nomination by Council on the advice of the ten electoral sections.

The current President (since 2004) is Professor Graeme Turner.

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