Professor Kathomi Gatwiri

Professor in Social Work

College of Education, Psychology and Social Work

Professor Kathomi Gatwiri is a nationally recognised scholar, researcher, and leader whose work bridges academic research and community impact. She is a Professor in the Social Work Discipline at Flinders University and an ARC DECRA Fellow at the College of Education, Psychology and Social Work.

As one of Australia’s leading Afro-diasporic scholars, Kathomi’s research focuses on decolonising methodologies and anti-racist pedagogies. Her interdisciplinary work explores racial trauma, identity, migranthood, and the experiences of minoritised people, particularly those assigned 'categories of difference’ in Australia. She developed the Racial Dignity Theory and the Racial Dignity Framework, as a tool for understanding racism as an assault on human dignity. This framework has been adopted across various organisational settings.

Since completing her PhD, Dr Gatwiri has secured over $1.5 million in competitive research funding. She has published more than 100 traditional and non-traditional research outputs, including the books African Womanhood and Incontinent Bodies and Afrodiasporic Identities in Australia.

She is the Founder and Director of Healing Together, a service offering culturally affirming therapeutic support for people impacted by racial trauma, and Femicide Count Kenya, a platform documenting murdered Kenyan women. She served for four years as President of the Australian Women and Gender Studies Association and is a member of the advisory committee for the Australian Human Rights Commission's Racism@Uni national study

Qualifications
  • PhD In Social Work 
  • Masters of Counselling & Psychotherapy (MCPsy)
  • BASW (First Class Honours)
  • Mini-MBA (Melbourne Business School
Honours, awards and grants
  • Outstanding African-Australian Professional of the Year (2024)
  • Vice-Chancellor's Award for Research Excellence and Outstanding Community Impact (2022)
  • Vice-Chancellor Early Career Researcher Award (2019)
  • Community Impact Award as 'Kenyan of the Year' (2017)
  • John &Gwen Waters Excellence Award (2012)
Key responsibilities

As Professor in Social Work and Head of Discipline, Kathomi Gatwiri leads one of the most diverse teams in an Australian university. The team brings together staff from nearly every continent (a positive reflection of our student body), each contributing distinct knowledge systems that expand the vision for a future-oriented social work program.

Kathomi spearheads the strategic direction of the Social Work discipline, offering leadership across curriculum design, teaching and research innovation, postgraduate supervision, and community engagement. Her vision is to cultivate a discipline grounded in a culture of dignity for both staff and students, responsive to contemporary social issues and aligned with professional standards.

She leads initiatives that embed mentorship, critical inquiry, trauma-informed approaches, and culturally safe practice into all aspects of teaching and learning. She also oversees operational planning, staffing, and resource management, and leads quality assurance processes including accreditation reviews and curriculum renewal.

Teaching interests

Kathomi’s teaching pedagogy is grounded in decolonising practice, dignity-informed approaches, and most importantly, an ethos of love. She prioritises culturally safe learning environments that centre the lived experiences of minoritised communities and challenge dominant narratives in social work education. Her teaching is relational, reflective, and critically engaged, encouraging students to interrogate systems of power and develop ethical, dignity-oriented practice. Kathomi's teaching interests are on trauma and resilience, decolonial identities, ethics and theory.  She integrates interdisciplinary perspectives across psychology, education, and social work, and uses non-traditional teaching methods including storytelling, community engagement, and practice-based learning.