Academic literature on the topic 'Australian National University Sports Union'

Create a spot-on reference in APA, MLA, Chicago, Harvard, and other styles

Select a source type:

Consult the lists of relevant articles, books, theses, conference reports, and other scholarly sources on the topic 'Australian National University Sports Union.'

Next to every source in the list of references, there is an 'Add to bibliography' button. Press on it, and we will generate automatically the bibliographic reference to the chosen work in the citation style you need: APA, MLA, Harvard, Chicago, Vancouver, etc.

You can also download the full text of the academic publication as pdf and read online its abstract whenever available in the metadata.

Journal articles on the topic "Australian National University Sports Union"

1

Patricios, Jon S., Clare L. Ardern, Michael David Hislop, Mark Aubry, Paul Bloomfield, Carolyn Broderick, Patrick Clifton, et al. "Implementation of the 2017 Berlin Concussion in Sport Group Consensus Statement in contact and collision sports: a joint position statement from 11 national and international sports organisations." British Journal of Sports Medicine 52, no. 10 (March 2, 2018): 635–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bjsports-2018-099079.

Full text
Abstract:
The 2017 Berlin Concussion in Sport Group Consensus Statement provides a global summary of best practice in concussion prevention, diagnosis and management, underpinned by systematic reviews and expert consensus. Due to their different settings and rules, individual sports need to adapt concussion guidelines according to their specific regulatory environment. At the same time, consistent application of the Berlin Consensus Statement’s themes across sporting codes is likely to facilitate superior and uniform diagnosis and management, improve concussion education and highlight collaborative research opportunities. This document summarises the approaches discussed by medical representatives from the governing bodies of 10 different contact and collision sports in Dublin, Ireland in July 2017. Those sports are: American football, Australian football, basketball, cricket, equestrian sports, football/soccer, ice hockey, rugby league, rugby union and skiing. This document had been endorsed by 11 sport governing bodies/national federations at the time of being published.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
2

Trinh, Giang Tue. "The attendance at sporting events: A generalized theory and its implications." International Journal of Market Research 60, no. 3 (May 2018): 232–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1470785318774677.

Full text
Abstract:
This article generalizes the well-known negative binomial distribution (NBD) theory to attendance behavior at sporting events. Using data from a large national survey across a range of sporting events in Australia, including Australian football, rugby league, soccer (outdoor), horse racing, motor sports, rugby union, cricket (outdoor), netball (indoor and outdoor), basketball (indoor and outdoor), harness racing, and dog racing, we show that the NBD is very robust in describing sporting event attendance behavior. This result has implications for sporting event marketing activities, such as which attendee segments should be targeted, how to increase ticket sales, as well as predicting future attendance behavior.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
3

Chadha, Rajesh. "Commentary: FTAS and the WTO Doha Development Round--Asian Response to EEU and FTAA." Global Economy Journal 5, no. 4 (December 7, 2005): 1850068. http://dx.doi.org/10.2202/1524-5861.1155.

Full text
Abstract:
Commentary on FTAs and the Doha Development Round. Rajesh Chadha is Chief Economist at the National Council of Applied Economic Research (NCAER) in New Delhi, India. His Teaching and research experience of more than 29 years includes the University of Delhi and the NCAER. Chadha’s specialization is international trade with significant experience in applied economic research and economic modeling. His international experience includes Visiting Scholar in the Department of Economics, University of Michigan, and in the Department of Economics, University of Melbourne, Australia. He has also held visiting faculty positions at IIT, Delhi; IIT, Roorkee; IEG, Delhi; IIFT, New Delhi; IIPA, New Delhi; MDI Gurgaon and AIMA, New Delhi. Chadha was consultant to the World Bank in 1989, 1990, and 1999, and Consultant to the Australian Government in 2002. He was nominated as a GTAP Research Fellow for 2004-2007 by Purdue University. His research experience includes national as well as international research projects sponsored by the Ministry of Commerce and the Ministry of Finance, Government of India; Government of Australia, Ford Foundation, European Union, World Bank, USAID, and ESCAP. He earned a B.Sc. Honours in Physics and an M.A. in Business Economics at the University of Delhi and a Ph.D. at the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Delhi.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
4

Kornéli, Beáta. "Nagy Britannia és Ausztrália közös atomprogramja 1945-1960." Belvedere Meridionale 31, no. 2 (2019): 153–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.14232/belv.2019.2.9.

Full text
Abstract:
Australia was determined to obtain a nuclear weapon after the Second World War. The most obvious solution seemed to collaborate with Britain doing nuclear research in the so-called “joint project”. The British defence planners had been aware of the fact that Great Britain would not survive a forthcoming nuclear attack at the dawn of the cold war and thus, they were in need of their own nuclear weapon. When the MacMahon Act came into force the Government of United States of America rejected the British to continue the joint research in the Manhattan Project and they wanted to retain their sole atom monopoly. They provided the British neither with raw material nor with nuclear technology, furthermore, they were not allowed to participate in the test blasts. Hence, the role of Australia was revalued by the British Government. Several productive intitiatives such as the establishment of the Australian National University, launching the Snowy Mountains project, deployment of the Royal Australian Air Force in Southeast Asia coincided with the joint project. The culmination of the Australian–British cooperation was the atomic blast in 1952 and the decision of the British to contribute to the construction of an Australian nuclear reactor. Nevertheless, the nuclear achievements of the Soviet Union put an end to the so far successful joint project.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
5

Davis, B. K., M. Schmidt, E. O'Keefe, M. J. Currie, A. M. Baynes, T. Bavinton, M. McNiven, and F. J. Bowden. "8. 'STAMP OUT CHLAMYDIA' PROJECT - BRINGING CHLAMYDIA SCREENING TO TERTIARY STUDENTS IN THE AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL TERRITORY." Sexual Health 4, no. 4 (2007): 287. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/shv4n4ab8.

Full text
Abstract:
Study's objective: Stamp Out Chlamydia (SOC) is a pilot research project funded by the Commonwealth Department of Health & Aging to devise and implement a cost effective program for education and chlamydia screening for ACT tertiary students aged 16-26 years at The Australian National University (ANU), University of Canberra and Canberra Institutes of Technology, that may be suitable for national implementation. Methodology: A collaborative clinical outreach project between Canberra Sexual Health Centre, Sexual Health and Family Planning ACT and ANU Medical School, whereby the SOC team attends student-initiated events on ACT tertiary campuses to educate and test young people, using self-obtained urine specimens. Summary of Results: The majority of these outreach events were attended by two Registered Nurses and the Health Promotion Officer. To date they have attended 19 events including Orientation Week activities, BBQ's, Easter Scavenger Hunt, Gay Pride Week events and sports events. Promoting the SOC project has been through word of mouth, SOC 'Champions', convenience and media advertising and a dedicated web site. By May 2007 the SOC project had: Interfaced with 1512 tertiary students and offered them the opportunity to participate in the research Screened 445 for chlamydia Found a chlamydia prevalence of 1.8% Treated eight cases and their contacts Of those screened: Male 240 Female 205 Target group 412 Conclusion: ACT tertiary students accept this outreach approach. Of students approached, over a quarter agreed to have screening. The high profile of the SOC project is leading to an increased awareness of chlamydia. Many students are unaware of the high incidence and/or the consequences of chlamydia, if left untreated and report that they would not have attended mainstream services for screening. Ongoing data analysis will determine if this project is cost effective and feasible.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
6

Pokorny, Scott, Tricia A. Stadnyk, Rajtantra Lilhare, Genevieve Ali, Stephen J. Déry, and Kristina Koenig. "Use of Ensemble-Based Gridded Precipitation Products for Assessing Input Data Uncertainty Prior to Hydrologic Modeling." Water 12, no. 10 (October 2, 2020): 2751. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/w12102751.

Full text
Abstract:
The spatial and temporal performance of an ensemble of five gridded climate datasets (precipitation) (North American Regional Reanalysis, European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts interim reanalysis, European Union Water and Global Change (WATCH) Watch Forcing data ERA-Interim, Global Forcing Data-Hydro, and The Australian National University spline interpolation) was evaluated towards quantifying gridded precipitation data ensemble uncertainty for hydrologic model input. Performance was evaluated over the Nelson–Churchill Watershed via comparison to two ground-based climate station datasets for year-to-year and season-to-season periods (1981–2010) at three spatial discretizations: distributed, sub-basin aggregation, and full watershed aggregation. All gridded datasets showed spatial performance variations, most notably in year-to-year total precipitation bias. Absolute minimum and maximum realizations were generated and assumed to represent total possible uncertainty bounds of the ensemble. Analyses showed that high magnitude precipitation events were often outside the uncertainty envelope; some increase in spatial aggregation, however, enveloped more observations. Results suggest that hydrologic models can reduce input uncertainty with some spatial aggregation, but begin to lose information as aggregation increases. Uncertainty bounds also revealed periods of elevated uncertainty. Assessing input ensemble bounds can be used to include high and low uncertainty periods in hydrologic model calibration and validation.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
7

Chebotarov, V. "At the Core of Economic Educational, Scientific and Pedagogical Elaboration." Economic Herald of the Donbas, no. 1 (63) (2021): 233–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.12958/1817-3772-2021-1(63)-233-237.

Full text
Abstract:
The article is dedicated to the 100th anniversary of one of the oldest institutions of higher education in the south-eastern Ukraine – Luhansk Taras Shevchenko National University. The achievements and contribution of LNU in the fields of pedagogy, history, geography, philology and linguistics, physics and mathematics, and Olympic sports are widely known in Ukraine and abroad. At the level of the best achievements there are also achievements of Luhansk Taras Shevchenko National University in the field of economic science, which is shown by the example of the modern department of economics, marketing and entrepreneurship. The author makes an attempt to establish historical justice in the history of world economics: to prove the unsurpassed importance of the developments of the former head of the department Vasily Antonovich Bader. In the late 1960 s, in parallel with the world-famous Ota Šik, in the context of the theory of "market socialism" he substantiated the doom and disintegration of the socialist economic system and its transformation into a market economy (much later, under other economic and socio-political conditions, Deng Xiaoping, the father of the "Opening of China", came to similar views). At the beginning of the 2000s, for the first time in Ukraine and Central and Eastern Europe, the department introduced a process of organizational and economic combination of research and educational activities – the establishment of a branch of the Institute of Industrial Economics of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine at the Luhansk Taras Shevchenko National University. With the beginning of the war in Donbass, the department became the first and only in Ukraine, on the basis of which was established a communication and consulting support center for leading international charitable organizations in Luhansk and Donetsk regions. The department has developed one of the first in Ukraine concepts of "Marshall Plan" for the Revival of the Donbas". The academic mobility experience of the department gained via the Visiting Professor program in teaching professional disciplines in Poland to students from the European Union, Asia and Africa under the ERASMUS+ Program is unique. Innovative are the practices of participation in the most prestigious European scientific and practical research projects, encouragement on a regular basis to the domestic educational process of leading entrepreneurs, teaching disciplines of free choice in English and cooperation with public authorities.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
8

Laing, Karen, Laura Mazzoli Smith, and Liz Todd. "The impact agenda and critical social research in education: Hitting the target but missing the spot?" Policy Futures in Education 16, no. 2 (December 26, 2017): 169–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1478210317742214.

Full text
Abstract:
This paper considers whether the impact agenda that has developed over the last decade in UK universities is likely to help create the conditions in which critical educational research makes a more visible difference to society. The UK audit of university research quality (the research excellence framework (REF) now includes an assessment of impact. Impact pathways are requirements of both national and European Union research funding bodies and the Australian Research Council. Issues in the assessment of the social impact of research are explored by the European projects Evaluating the impact of EU SSH, social science humanities, research (IMPACT-EV) and ACcelerate CO-creation by setting up a Multi-actor Platform for Impact from Social Sciences and Humanities (ACCOMPLISSH). For many UK researchers the institutional focus on influencing the world outside the academy has brought welcome support and resources to engage with society and may appear to bring universities back to something approaching their original civic identity. However, evidence from across the academy suggests that impact as depicted in REF impact case studies does not accurately represent the experience either of the academic research endeavour or of impact as it may be more broadly construed. Analysis reported here of 85 highly rated impact case studies in the education unit of assessment of the 2014 REF suggests there is a risk that the REF impact process will embed a shift against qualitative and theoretically driven methodology that is often found in socially critical educational research. Impact is postured as neutral, hiding the neoliberal drive towards research models based on implementation, evaluation and policy. There is a need to create spaces in universities for rethinking of the impact agenda, perhaps looking at value or social creation instead of, or as an integral aspect of, impact.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
9

Kosztin, Nikolett, József Tőzsér, László Csernoch, and Ildikó Balatoni. "Reasons for and obstacles to cycling in opinions of residents of Debrecen, Hungary." Applied Studies in Agribusiness and Commerce 11, no. 3-4 (December 31, 2017): 53–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.19041/apstract/2017/3-4/8.

Full text
Abstract:
It is a basic aim of the European Union that due to the developments in 2014-2020 the bicycle would become one of the most often used transportation, touristic, and sports equipment. We were interested to see to what extent is bicycling present in the transportation system of Debrecen and what are the most important reasons for its residents to use the bicycles. The dedication of Debrecen to promote cycling is clearly proven by the number of newly built or resurfaced bike paths and by the fact that the University of Debrecen has introduced – alone in the region – UniBike which is a bicycle renting system brought forth by the need of its students. Here we present the developments that took place in the North Plain Region in the past few years. We have also analyzed the national and European strategies and reports on bicycling. A survey was conducted among the youth of Debrecen to explore their cycling habits. The data were evaluated using the EvaSys program. Until the end of 2011 with the help of different funds 862 km of bike paths had been built in Hungary. In the North Plain Region due to funds totaling 777 million HUF 15.7 km long bike paths had been constructed until 2015. The development of tourism in this direction is promoted by the web-pages and brochures offering bicycle-tours around Debrecen. Nevertheless, bicycling in the neighboring townships is present not as an instrument for sports and/or tourism, rather as a mean of transportation. It is a clear goal in Europe and thus in Hungary to have bike paths that can provide the means of safe cycling. In parallel, it is also important to promote the benefits of bicycling, including positive physiological effects, cost-effectiveness, and environment-friendliness to increase the proportion of those who select bicycling as an alternative. JEL Code: I15
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
10

Lee, Dong-Yeong, Young-Jin Park, Sang-Youn Song, Soon-Taek Jeong, and Dong-Hee Kim. "Risk Factors for Posterior Cage Migration after Lumbar Interbody Fusion Surgery." Asian Spine Journal 12, no. 1 (February 28, 2018): 59–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.4184/asj.2018.12.1.59.

Full text
Abstract:
<sec><title>Study Design</title><p>A retrospective clinical case series.</p></sec><sec><title>Purpose</title><p>To determine the strength of association between cage retropulsion and its related factors.</p></sec><sec><title>Overview of Literature</title><p>Lumbar interbody fusion with cage can obtain a firm union and can restore the disc height with normal sagittal and coronal alignment. Although lumbar interbody fusion procedures have satisfactory clinical outcomes, peri- and postoperative complications regarding the cage remain challenging.</p></sec><sec><title>Methods</title><p>From January 2006 to June 2016, 1,047 patients with lumbar degenerative disc disease who underwent posterior lumbar interbody fusion or transforaminal interbody fusion at Gyeongsang National University Hospital were enrolled. Medical records and pre- and postoperative radiographs were reviewed to identify significant cage retropulsion-related factors. The associations between cage retropulsion with various risk factors were evaluated by calculating odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) using multiple logistic regression analysis.</p></sec><sec><title>Results</title><p>Of 1,229 disc levels, 16 cases (1.3%, 10 men and 6 women) had cage retropulsion. Univariate analysis revealed no significant differences between the cage retropulsion group and the no cage retropulsion group with regard to demographic data such as age, sex, weight, height, body mass index (BMI), smoking habits, presence of osteoporosis, and duration of follow-up. Multivariate analysis revealed that low BMI (OR, 0.875; 95% CI, 0.771–0.994; <italic>p</italic>=0.040), presence of screw loosening (OR, 27.400; 95% CI, 7.818–96.033; <italic>p</italic>&lt;0.001), and pear-shaped disc (OR, 9.158; 95% CI, 2.455–34.160; <italic>p</italic>=0.001) were significantly associated with cage retropulsion.</p></sec><sec><title>Conclusions</title><p>This study demonstrated that low BMI, loosening of posterior instrumentation, and pear-shaped disc were associated with cage retropulsion after lumbar interbody fusion. Therefore, when performing lumbar interbody fusion with a cage, surgeons should have skillful surgical techniques for firm fixation to prevent cage retropulsion, particularly in non-obese patients.</p></sec>
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles

Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Australian National University Sports Union"

1

Herbster, David M. "Proposal to First Union Bank for corporate sponsorship of Virginia Tech athletics." Master's thesis, This resource online, 1994. http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-10242009-020028/.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles

Books on the topic "Australian National University Sports Union"

1

National Sport Psychology Conference (1st 1983 Australian National University). Australian sport psychology: The eighties : proceedings of the Inaugural National Sport Psychology Conference, 16-18 February 1983, Australian National University, Canberra, Australia. Edited by Bond Jeffrey, Gross John B, Australian Institute of Sport, and Australian Sports Commission. Canberra: Australian Institute of Sport, 1990.

Find full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
We offer discounts on all premium plans for authors whose works are included in thematic literature selections. Contact us to get a unique promo code!

To the bibliography