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Presentations

Dr Waling engages several community panels and other speaking opportunities nationally and internationally. These include keynote lectures and invited talks, facilitating workshops, guest lectures and conference presentations.

2016

Rethinking microaggressions and anti-social behaviour against LGBTIQ Youth

British Society of Criminology: Inequalities in a diverse world

Conference Paper

2016

Blokesworld: Consumerism, reflexive nostalgia and the selling of an ‘authentic’ Australian self

24th Annual Interdisciplinary Conference of the American Men's Studies Association (AMSA): (Un)Masking Masculinities: Constructing and Deconstructing Representations of Masculinities.

Conference Paper

2015

Supporting LGBTIQ Youth in Higher Education

International Day against Homophobia & Transphobia Week, Monash Student Association

Invited Panel

2015

Men’s Sheds: An Insight into What Works

11th Australian National Men’s Health Conference

Conference Paper

2015

The Post-PhD Journey

Monash University: Academic Alternate Careers

Invited Workshop

2015

Men, Masculinity & Violence

On-The-Line

Invited Workshop

2015

LGBTIQ experiences of victimisation in university settings

The 28th Annual Australian and New Zealand Society of Criminology

Conference Paper

2015

LGBTIQ experiences in tertiary education: implied consent, coming-out, and narratives of ‘non’-inclusion

1st National Conference Australia Forum on Sexuality, Education and Health

Conference Paper

2013

Sex and Gender Diversity

International Day against Homophobia & Transphobia Week, Monash Student Association

Invited Panel

2013

The Aussie bloke: an investigation of local and global mythmaking and the contemporary Australian male

PSI Postgraduate Research Symposium

Conference Paper

2012

Heroes, fossils and metros: narratives of conflicting masculinities and tensions within contemporary Australian media

The Gender Games: Stories in/for the Contemporary World

Conference Paper

2012

Heroes, fossils and metros: narratives of conflicting masculinities and tensions within contemporary Australian media

PSI Postgraduate Research Symposium

Conference Paper

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