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Introduction: Current Directions in Australian Anthropologies of the Environment
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Environmental anthropology is an expanding field in Australia. Extensive research on Aboriginal relationships to land and natural resources has provided the foundation for growing anthropological interest in the interactions of other Australians with the biophysical environments they inhabit. Australian-based anthropologists also continue to contribute to research on environmental beliefs and practices in other parts of the world. This paper provides a brief overview of previously explored th...
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
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Introduction: Current Directions in Australian Anthropologies of the Environment
The Australian Journal of Anthropology
; Environmental anthropology is an expanding field in Australia. Extensive research on Aboriginal relationships to land and natural resources has provided the foundation for growing anthropological interest in the interactions of other Australians with the biophysical environments they inhabit.
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The old order changeth.(Editorial)
Australian Journal of Management
; ... abnormal returns here, with a dramatic increase in trading volumes on and after the announcement date. Housekeeping There is good news for the AJM: after a period of twenty years or so, the Journal will be indexed again in the Thomson Web of Science Social Science ...
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Textual phantasmagoria: Marcus Clarke, light literature and the colonial uncanny.
Australian Literary Studies
; Canonical British Romanticism, at least according to its own self-image, is sharply juxtaposed to the popular. In Book VII of the Prelude, William Wordsworth's description of London, and the forms of popular culture associated with it, establishes a set of oppositions that have been taken as
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From social issues to social policy: engaging professionals and the public.
Australian Journal of Social Issues
; Introduction It seems to us to be rather a novelty to consider the AJSI as a means to accumulate knowledge in the same way that a disciplinary journal might. The Journal's writers (and even editors) have not necessarily understood each paper as situated within a tradition of concerns about issues
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'I shall tell just such stories as I please': Mary Fortune and the Australian Journal.
Australian Literary Studies
; I have been told by some that I tell horrible stories, and by others that I am not sensational enough; and I have personally come to the conclusion that I shall tell just such stories as I please, and that those who do not like them need not read them; and so I begin, always with this
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Looking backward, looking forward: Australian early childhood trends since 1960.
Australian Journal of Early Childhood
; Introduction By including the Australian Pre-School Quarterly (APQ), the Australian Journal of Early Childhood (AJEC) is now 40 years old. This achievement provides a solid base from which to examine some of the trends and changes that have occurred in early childhood philosophy, theory, and
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Reading early childhood and developing literacy.
Australian Journal of Early Childhood
; Introduction Education systems throughout the world focus on children's reading ability as a marker for educational success. Parents are anxious if their child is slow to start reading and proud if they read early. Major resources continue to be devoted to intervention programs aimed at
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Australian social issues: a retrospective.(Editorial)
Australian Journal of Social Issues
; This issue opens the 40th volume of the Australian Journal of Social Issues series. Strictly speaking the 40th anniversary of the Journal's publication was reached in September 2001, a milestone that went unnoticed during the transition between the editorial team at the University of New England
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Silences, sex-roles and subjectivities 40 years of gender in the Australian Journal of Early Childhood.
Australian Journal of Early Childhood
; The beginnings: silences and sex-role stereotypes exist (1960s-1970s) In APQ's/AJEC's first 20 years there was considerable silence concerning gender issues. Only three articles in this 20-year period had a specific focus on gender in early childhood. The first dealt with preschool children's
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Change of editor.(Gabrielle Lakomski resigns)(Brief Article)
Australian Journal of Education
; This issue of the Australian Journal of Education is the second issue under the editorship of Professor Simon Marginson. To mark this change, we introduce a new cover design. Simon Marginson joins a distinguished list of editors of the journal since its introduction in 1957: 1957-72 William
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