News
CDU researcher heads to the US to support immigrant micro-businesses in the Territory
Charles Darwin University (CDU) Senior Research Fellow Dr Kate Golebiowska has been awarded a Fulbright scholarship to assess how business acceleration can improve immigrant women’s inclusion with the operation of micro-enterprises.
The Fulbright Coral Sea Scholarship supports three to four months of study in the United States, where Dr Golebiowska from CDU’s Northern Institute, will immerse herself in a business accelerator program at Emory University’s Goizueta Business School in Atlanta.
As a part of the program, Dr Golebiowska will learn everything from business administration to the management practices of small migrant-owned businesses, with skills she hopes to apply back to the Territory.
Dr Kate Golebiowska said the program empowers new and aspiring micro-business entrepreneurs, most of whom are women of minority and immigrant backgrounds with business knowledge, skills and networks.
"This program provides a model that I hope to learn from and use these insights to create a framework for establishing a similar initiative for immigrant women micro-entrepreneurs in the NT,” Dr Golebiowska said.
Dr Golebiowska plans to contribute to conversations in Australia about how university-led partnerships can promote immigrant women's empowerment through micro-enterprise and positively impact communities.
“This program looks at everything from administration to management of small migrant-owned businesses, and I hope to return to the NT with the knowledge to help communities here,” she said.
“I am honoured and thrilled to be receiving this scholarship and I hope to inspire other first-generation migrants in Australia.”
The Australian and US governments support the Fulbright scholarships through the non-profit Australian-American Fulbright Commission that administers the program.
Dr Golebiowska hopes to travel to the United States in 2023.
Find out about previous Fulbright scholarship recipients and how to apply.
Related Articles
Rooting out plant diseases: Are computers ready to run our farms?
Nature is still too complex for artificial intelligence (AI) modelling to be effective, but the tipping point is close, according to a new study that found the technology may still trip at the last real-world hurdle.
Read more about Rooting out plant diseases: Are computers ready to run our farms?Tech on the treetops: How AI can protect forests
The Artificial Intelligence model was developed to detect changes in forest cover.
Read more about Tech on the treetops: How AI can protect forestsVolunteers protected Darwin wildlife for 50+ years, but new research suggests it’s time to stop winging conservation efforts
Volunteers have shouldered the burden of shorebird conservation in the Top End for more than half a century, but new research from Charles Darwin University (CDU) suggests it’s time for the government to take responsibility for all of the Northern Territory’s residents – including those with wings.
Read more about Volunteers protected Darwin wildlife for 50+ years, but new research suggests it’s time to stop winging conservation efforts