Mparntwe/Alice Springs | 10 – 12 June, 2026
CALL FOR PANELS now open!
Mparntwe/Alice Springs AAS Conference 10-12 June 2026 (plus ANSA Day and CNTA Day on 9 June)
The Call for Panels will close on 30 January 2026 and the Call for Papers will open in mid-February.
Click HERE to submit a panel. PLEASE ENSURE YOU ARE LOGGED IN TO THE MEMBER PORTAL BEFORE COMPLETING THE FORM. If you are NOT an AAS member and would like to submit a panel, please contact admin@aas.asn.au
Conference attendants from interstate and overseas, please note that June is Central Australia’s peak tourist season and we recommend booking tickets and accommodation as soon as you can (you can find some recommendations here).
If you plan to add on a hike on the world-famous Larapinta Trail, make sure you book early!
We look forward to seeing you on beautiful Arrernte Country soon!
This is the first time an annual AAS conference is to be held at Mparntwe/Alice Springs. We want to take this opportunity to gather anthropologists from far and wide and introduce them to the splendour of Arrernte Country. We are also inviting delegates to participate in what makes Mparntwe/Alice Springs so special, providing an inspiration for the presentations, panels and plenary sessions. Our conference theme – Lines, Layers, Depth – pays homage to Mparntwe/Alice Springs, and the intertwining of its tracks of dancing Dreaming caterpillars, the contour lines of Alhekulyele/Mt Gillen against the desert sky, the telegraph line that marked Mparntwe on the maps of the colonialists, the lines of representation in desert art, and the intertwining storylines of and about Mparntwe/Alice Springs.
Mparntwe/Alice Springs layers stories of Dreaming dingos and thylacines fighting; stories of Arrernte ways of being in the world; stories about telegraph stations, pioneers, frontiers and massacres; stories about migrants who have come to live and work here over time; stories about violence, curfews and vigilantes; stories of military bases and technologies of war and surveillance; as well as stories of kin, Country and friendship, of art, music, and film. Mparntwe/Alice Springs is many-layered in so many other ways, as well – metaphysically, geologically, politically, socially, anthropologically. We live on layers of soil, rock and stone, permeated by water flows and cradling aquifers. Strata not just make up the ground beneath our feet, strata layer us in society and politics, think class, levels of government, the hierarchy of the court system, and more.
Layers are separate but interconnected, they themselves are part of something larger, they co-exist, build on each other, may rub against each other, feed or consume each other. Depth is created, re-created and deconstructed and created again, by combining lines, layers and spaces, not just in storytelling but also in music, visual arts, design, planning and, we suggest, in anthropology.
Our theme – Lines, Layers, Depth – is an invitation to think with Mparntwe/Alice Springs as a place. We invite participants to interpret the conference theme as widely, broadly, deeply as they wish, and encourage panels in their capacity to extend outwards from this notion.
Keynote Speaker: J. Kēhaulani Kauanui
Plenary Speakers: Tess Lea (Chair), Amanda Kearney, Ben Scambary, Gretchen Stolte, J. Kēhaulani Kauanui, Suzi Hutchings, Tim Neale.