Academic literature on the topic 'Bendigo Victoria'

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Journal articles on the topic "Bendigo Victoria"

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Mathisen, Bernice, Susan Bennett, Christine Lockett, Katherine Beazley, Juanita Howlett, Melinda Charlesworth, Helen Lees, and Jaynee Read. "Talking Matters Bendigo: Engaging Parents Early to Prevent Long-Term Speech, Language and Communication Needs in Preschool-Aged Children." Children Australia 41, no. 4 (November 2, 2016): 258–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cha.2016.34.

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This article reports on qualitative research conducted to evaluate parents’ perspectives of their experiences of Talking Matters Bendigo (TMB), a screening programme initiated between health and educational professionals in regional Victoria to improve access to speech pathologists for parents of preschool-aged children with speech, language and communication concerns. Drop-in clinics are conducted in three Bendigo schools monthly. The programme is a collaborative partnership between the Victorian Department of Education and Training, Maternal and Child Health and ‘Off to an Early Start’ (City of Greater Bendigo), Bendigo Health and the disciplines of Speech Pathology and Education at La Trobe University, Bendigo. La Trobe Education (Honours) student researchers interviewed a group of 10 parents attending TMB using face to face interviews and collected data using an online survey after parents attended a session. Thematic analysis of the data was completed and inter-reliability checks were completed by two external La Trobe PhD students to increase reliability and validity. Results indicated parents were satisfied with the information provided by the speech pathologists and they reported that they intended to utilise this new knowledge at home with their children. This study provides preliminary evidence that novel service delivery options such as TMB can be successful in engaging parents early in health literacy so that speech, language and communication problems in preschool-aged children can be identified, managed and even prevented.
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Condliffe, Peter. "Rural decline and community services education in Victoria: the Bendigo experience." Australian and International Journal of Rural Education 2, no. 1 (January 7, 2020): 18–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.47381/aijre.v2i1.267.

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In 1989 Phillip Institute of Technology (based at Bundoora (Melbourne)) offered its Bachelor of Social Work degree (BSW) and Graduate Diploma in Community Development (CD) in the Central Victorian city of Bendigo. This paper outline some of the contextual issues and identifies certain key factors in addressing these issues.
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Fyffe, Chris, Susana T. Gavidia-Payne, and Jeffrey McCubbery. "Early Intervention and Families in Rural Victoria." Australasian Journal of Early Childhood 20, no. 4 (December 1995): 34–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/183693919502000407.

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Families are increasingly understood as inter-related systems where each component interacts with other components in diverse ways. Contemporary research on families which have children with disabilities emphasises the complexity of families and the futility of searching for one characteristic of a family as predictive of family outcomes. The current study investigated the relationship between family needs, family supports, and demographic information for rural families who were eligible for early intervention services. The study did not attempt to review specific early intervention services, but rather to associate the characteristics of services which families found most and least effective. The results are discussed in terms of the practice of providing family-focused models of service delivery. This project was funded by the Golden North Centre, Spastic Society, Bendigo
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Schaubs, P. M., and C. Zhao. "Numerical models of gold‐deposit formation in the Bendigo‐Ballarat Zone, Victoria." Australian Journal of Earth Sciences 49, no. 6 (December 2002): 1077–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1046/j.1440-0952.2002.00964.x.

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Wilson, C. J. L., P. M. Schaubs, and L. D. Leader. "Mineral Precipitation in the Quartz Reefs of the Bendigo Gold Deposit, Victoria, Australia." Economic Geology 108, no. 2 (February 21, 2013): 259–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.2113/econgeo.108.2.259.

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Li, X., T. A. P. Kwak, and R. W. Brown. "Wallrock alteration in the Bendigo gold ore field, Victoria, Australia: Uses in exploration." Ore Geology Reviews 13, no. 1-5 (April 1998): 381–406. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0169-1368(97)00027-9.

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Willman, Clive E. "Regional structural controls of gold mineralisation, Bendigo and Castlemaine goldfields, Central Victoria, Australia." Mineralium Deposita 42, no. 5 (July 15, 2006): 449–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00126-006-0072-8.

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Xu, B., V. Nadurata, K. Avery, C. Chilvers, and S. Laiu. "Clinical outcomes of pharmaco-invasive ST-elevation myocardial infarction management in Bendigo, Victoria." Heart, Lung and Circulation 24 (2015): S142. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.hlc.2015.06.068.

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Hall, Lisa. "Navigating the Rural Clinical Education Pathway in the Time of a Pandemic: Opportunities and Challenges." Australian and International Journal of Rural Education 31, no. 1 (March 24, 2021): 76–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.47381/aijre.v31i1.294.

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The outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic has changed everything about the world we live in, in 2020. It is having obvious impacts on the way we teach and the way we learn. In Victoria, Monash Rural Health Bendigo is one of the few places that has managed to continue clinical health education and clinical placements throughout 2020 - albeit in modified forms. Monash Rural Health Bendigo provides clinical years education to a cohort of between 100 and 130 Third, Fourth- and Fifth-Year Monash Medical students in a rural setting. It is largely an 'apprentice based' model of learning where the students get access to rural clinical sites and rural health experts as well as a state-of-the-art clinical skills and simulation lab to undertake the clinical years of their medical degree. But what happens to this kind of model during a pandemic induced shut down such as was experienced in 2020? This paper explores the challenges but also opportunities for students pursuing a rural health pathway in the midst of a public health emergency. It examines the findings of the COVID-19 Educational Evaluation conducted in Bendigo throughout 2020 and reveals the advantages but also the unanticipated consequences of students choosing to study rurally in the midst of a global pandemic.
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Gardner, Fiona. "Shared Action: Stronger communities, safer children." Children Australia 27, no. 2 (2002): 23–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1035077200005034.

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This article explores the effectiveness of an innovative and exciting project called ‘Shared Action’, a community development approach to child protection in Bendigo, Victoria. Shared Action was a three-year project which started in January 1997. It began by encouraging a sense of community ownership. A shared vision was developed with key goals leading to a wide range of community activities. A sense of hope and cooperation grew along with social networks, the capacity to resolve conflict constructively and a shared sense of community responsibility.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Bendigo Victoria"

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Reed, Brian, and n/a. "A survey of regular teachers' concerns towards the integration of disabled children in state primary schools, Bendigo region, Victoria." University of Canberra. Education, 1990. http://erl.canberra.edu.au./public/adt-AUC20061107.100059.

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The integration of disabled children into regular schools is a current educational and social issue causing widespread interest, concern and debate throughout Australia. The most controversial and innovative adoption of integration policy has occurred in Victoria since the release of the Collins Report in 1984. The present study was conducted in 26 State primary schools in the Bendigo area of the Loddon Campaspe Mallee region of Victoria where disabled children had been integrated in regular classrooms with the assistance of a paid teacher aide during 1988. The purpose of the study was to survey the concerns of those teachers into whose classes children with disabilities had been integrated. The Stages of Concern (SoC) dimension of the Concerns-Based Adoption Model (C-BAM) was chosen as the research methodology. C-BAM was developed at the Research and Development Center for Teacher Education, University of Texas at Austin, and for the purpose of this study, the methodology consisted of a questionnaire of 35 standardized items (the Stages of Concern Questionnaire), and a School Survey. The study set out to identify the concerns of teachers (ii) toward integration, and to establish reasons why teachers are at particular stages of concern. Factors included teachers' age, gender, number of years of teaching experience, qualifications and in-service training. Other issues related to the disabled children themselves, the school, and factors such as availability of resources, funding levels, and access to support systems. This study developed from the policy document Integration in Victorian Education (the Collins Report, 1984). Since then, the Ministry of Education has published two additional booklets (in January and February, 1987), which partly address some of the issues included in this thesis. These include resourcing, in-servicing and the legal implications of the innovation. The analysis of the data points to major shortcomings which will jeopardize the implementation process and the likely success of the innovation. A number of recommendations have been suggested, with particular reference to the pre-service and in-service training of teachers, and issues relating to funding and resources. The findings have implications for all classroom teachers, as potentially all are required to accept disabled children into their classes. The results and recommendations also have relevance for the Ministry of Education, whose responsibility it is to ensure that the integration of disabled children into regular classes is fully supported at a government level, and for training institutions, whose task it is to provide appropriate pre-service and in-service programs for present and future classroom teachers.
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Leiska, Katharine [Verfasser]. "Skandinavische Musik in Deutschland um 1900 : Symphonien von Christian Sinding, Victor Bendix und Carl Nielsen zwischen Gattungstradition und Nord-Imagines / Katharine Leiska." Frankfurt : Peter Lang GmbH, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften, 2012. http://d-nb.info/1042413428/34.

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Raine, Matthew David. "Polyphase deformation and the structural controls on economic gold occurrences within the Bendigo Goldfield, Central Victoria, Australia." 2005. http://eprints.jcu.edu.au/1172.

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Raine, Matthew David. "Polyphase deformation and the structural controls on economic gold occurences within the Bendigo gold field, central Victoria, Australia." Thesis, 2005. https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/1172/1/01front.pdf.

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The Bendigo Goldfield is historically the largest producing goldfield within the Lachlan Fold Belt of southeastern Australia, and is a classic example of a structurally controlled turbidite-hosted gold deposit. Since 1993, Bendigo Mining Ltd. has been re-evaluating part of the goldfield and is in the process of developing an underground mine. The current development, which accesses eight auriferous reefs to a depth of ~800 m, presents a unique opportunity to re-examine the structurally controlled reefs, which characterise the central Victorian goldfields. The identification of multiple foliations, both proximal and distal to the mineralisation, prompted a reinvestigation of the deformation chronology, which revealed that the structural evolution of the goldfield was more complex than previously thought. A five-stage deformation chronology (D1-D5) based primarily on the recognition of overprinting tectonic foliations (S1-S5) is proposed. D1 to D3 represent distinct, yet progressive phases of ENE-WSW shortening possibly during the Benambran Orogeny (ca. 439-435 Ma), with D2 corresponding to the peak of deformation and metamorphism. N-S directed shortening during D4 indicates that a change in the principal shortening axis has occurred and as such, D4 could represent the later stages of the Tabberabberan Orogeny (ca. 381-377 Ma). Deformation associated with D5 suggests a period of NNW-SSE directed shortening, which may correspond to the younger Kanimblan Orogeny (ca. 360-340 Ma). A period of deformation and fault reactivation that post-dates both D5 and Jurassic dykes has been recognised within the goldfield. However, the extent of this deformation remains unclear and no associated tectonic foliation has been observed. At Bendigo, economic occurrences of gold are intimately related to the structural evolution of the goldfield and are associated with late-stage mineral phases, which post-date the syn-D2 quartz veins such as the classic saddle reefs. On the basis of structural, microstructural and paragenetic observations it is proposed that the deposition of gold occurred during D3, and more specifically, in association with the development of D3 kink bands. The D3 kinks vary in size from small-scale kink bands (S3) on a millimetre-scale, through to large-scale kinks (F3) at a kilometre-scale. The small-scale D3 kink bands consist of four sets of conjugate extensional kinks, which exhibit an approximately orthorhombic symmetry about a sub-vertical axis, suggesting deformation in response to triaxial strain. Spatial analysis of historical production data has revealed a number of previously unrecognised high-grade trends. These trends coincide with the intersection axis between a kink band axial plane and bedding. It is proposed that these intersections control ore shoot geometry and location, because they also correspond to the orientation of historically worked ore shoots and those encountered more recently by Bendigo Mining Ltd. A new understanding of the controls on ore shoots has considerable implications for future exploration within the goldfield, and elsewhere in central Victoria.
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5

Raine, Matthew David. "Polyphase deformation and the structural controls on economic gold occurences within the Bendigo gold field, central Victoria, Australia." 2005. http://eprints.jcu.edu.au/1172/1/01front.pdf.

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The Bendigo Goldfield is historically the largest producing goldfield within the Lachlan Fold Belt of southeastern Australia, and is a classic example of a structurally controlled turbidite-hosted gold deposit. Since 1993, Bendigo Mining Ltd. has been re-evaluating part of the goldfield and is in the process of developing an underground mine. The current development, which accesses eight auriferous reefs to a depth of ~800 m, presents a unique opportunity to re-examine the structurally controlled reefs, which characterise the central Victorian goldfields. The identification of multiple foliations, both proximal and distal to the mineralisation, prompted a reinvestigation of the deformation chronology, which revealed that the structural evolution of the goldfield was more complex than previously thought. A five-stage deformation chronology (D1-D5) based primarily on the recognition of overprinting tectonic foliations (S1-S5) is proposed. D1 to D3 represent distinct, yet progressive phases of ENE-WSW shortening possibly during the Benambran Orogeny (ca. 439-435 Ma), with D2 corresponding to the peak of deformation and metamorphism. N-S directed shortening during D4 indicates that a change in the principal shortening axis has occurred and as such, D4 could represent the later stages of the Tabberabberan Orogeny (ca. 381-377 Ma). Deformation associated with D5 suggests a period of NNW-SSE directed shortening, which may correspond to the younger Kanimblan Orogeny (ca. 360-340 Ma). A period of deformation and fault reactivation that post-dates both D5 and Jurassic dykes has been recognised within the goldfield. However, the extent of this deformation remains unclear and no associated tectonic foliation has been observed. At Bendigo, economic occurrences of gold are intimately related to the structural evolution of the goldfield and are associated with late-stage mineral phases, which post-date the syn-D2 quartz veins such as the classic saddle reefs. On the basis of structural, microstructural and paragenetic observations it is proposed that the deposition of gold occurred during D3, and more specifically, in association with the development of D3 kink bands. The D3 kinks vary in size from small-scale kink bands (S3) on a millimetre-scale, through to large-scale kinks (F3) at a kilometre-scale. The small-scale D3 kink bands consist of four sets of conjugate extensional kinks, which exhibit an approximately orthorhombic symmetry about a sub-vertical axis, suggesting deformation in response to triaxial strain. Spatial analysis of historical production data has revealed a number of previously unrecognised high-grade trends. These trends coincide with the intersection axis between a kink band axial plane and bedding. It is proposed that these intersections control ore shoot geometry and location, because they also correspond to the orientation of historically worked ore shoots and those encountered more recently by Bendigo Mining Ltd. A new understanding of the controls on ore shoots has considerable implications for future exploration within the goldfield, and elsewhere in central Victoria.
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Books on the topic "Bendigo Victoria"

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Water for gold!: The fight to quench Central Victoria's goldfields. North Melbourne, Vic: Australian Scholarly Pub., 2009.

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Russell, Geoffrey Brain. Water for gold!: The fight to quench Central Victoria's goldfields. North Melbourne, Vic: Australian Scholarly Pub., 2009.

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Peterson, Lynette. Reading the landscape: Documentation and analysis of a relict feature of land degradation in the Bendigo District, Victoria. Melbourne, Vic: Dept. of Geography and Environmental Sciences, Monash University, 1996.

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Cleary, Colin. Bendigo Labor: The maintenance of traditions in a regional city. Epsom, Vic: C. Cleary, 1999.

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Ginger, Ray. The bending cross: A biography of Eugene Victor Debs. Chicago, IL: Haymarket Books, 2007.

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Ginger, Ray. The bending cross: A biography of Eugene Victor Debs. Kirksville, Mo: Thomas Jefferson University Press, 1992.

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Kinsella, Joseph. The Heart of Victoria Bendigo, Castlemaine, Daylesford, Macedon. Best Shot!, 2004.

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Pukk, Ulo, and Kornelia Freeman. Goldfields of Victoria: From Macedon to Ballarat, Bendigo and Beyond. Melbourne Books, 2017.

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Ginger, Ray. The Bending Cross: A Biography of Eugene Victor Debs. Haymarket Books, 2007.

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Zurn, Perry, and Dani S. Bassett. Curious Minds. The MIT Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.7551/mitpress/11009.001.0001.

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An exhilarating, genre-bending exploration of curiosity's powerful capacity to connect ideas and people. Curious about something? Google it. Look at it. Ask a question. But is curiosity simply information seeking? According to this exhilarating, genre-bending book, what's left out of the conventional understanding of curiosity are the wandering tracks, the weaving concepts, the knitting of ideas, and the thatching of knowledge systems—the networks, the relations between ideas and between people. Curiosity, say Perry Zurn and Dani Bassett, is a practice of connection: it connects ideas into networks of knowledge, and it connects knowers themselves, both to the knowledge they seek and to each other. Zurn and Bassett—identical twins who write that their book “represents the thought of one mind and two bodies”—harness their respective expertise in the humanities and the sciences to get irrepressibly curious about curiosity. Traipsing across literatures of antiquity and medieval science, Victorian poetry and nature essays, as well as work by writers from a variety of marginalized communities, they trace a multitudinous curiosity. They identify three styles of curiosity—the busybody, who collects stories, creating loose knowledge networks; the hunter, who hunts down secrets or discoveries, creating tight networks; and the dancer, who takes leaps of creative imagination, creating loopy ones. Investigating what happens in a curious brain, they offer an accessible account of the network neuroscience of curiosity. And they sketch out a new kind of curiosity-centric and inclusive education that embraces everyone's curiosity. The book performs the very curiosity that it describes, inviting readers to participate—to be curious with the book and not simply about it.
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Book chapters on the topic "Bendigo Victoria"

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McMichael, Celia, and Caitlin Nunn. "Conducting health research with resettled refugees in Australia: field sites, ethics, and methods." In The Health of Refugees, 230–44. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198814733.003.0012.

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Research involving resettled refugees presents many complexities. In particular, how do we engage ethically with research participants and also ensure that the data we produce is rigorous and makes a productive contribution to knowledge about refugee health? This chapter reflects on two qualitative research projects involving people from refugee backgrounds who have resettled in Victoria, Australia: one project with refugee-background women living in the capital city, Melbourne; another with refugee-background youth living in Bendigo, a regional city. Both projects focused on refugee settlement and psychosocial health. Focusing on three key aspects of the research process: conceptualizing the field site, ethics in practice and qualitative research methods, we suggest that the dual imperatives of refugee research—significance to people with refugee backgrounds and relevant agencies, institutions and governments, and ethical and rigorous research practice—are best served by a reflexive, sensitive and creative relationship with both the research process and with refugee-background participants.
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Hutchinson, Robert. "Crimes without Punishment." In After Nuremberg, 148–90. Yale University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300255300.003.0006.

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This chapter explores the rationale behind John McCloy’s final clemency decisions in January 1951 and the public backlash that quickly followed. In granting mass reprieves to the Landsberg prisoners, McCloy implicitly and explicitly called into question the validity of the Nuremberg trials, providing rhetorical victories for the unrepentant Nazis who decried the tribunals as illegitimate exercises in “victor’s justice” and denounced the postwar American commitment to international law as a sham. McCloy’s decisions were met with a firestorm of critical commentary in media outlets around the world. American, French, and British critics decried what they interpreted as McCloy’s bending to the will of the loudest and most reactionary voices in West German politics. Jewish groups and the state of Israel were horrified at the apparent trivialization of the broader Nazi project of genocide, and the continued marginalization of surviving victims. All expressed both regret for the consequences that the clemency decisions would have on the reluctantly forged consensus on the prevention of war crimes and genocide in international law, as well as dismay at the apparent propaganda victory McCloy had handed to Stalin by setting so many war criminals free.
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Hahamovitch, Cindy. "“For All Those Bending Years”." In No Man's Land. Princeton University Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691102689.003.0010.

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This chapter considers the developments of the 1980s for the Jamaican guestworkers. The decade brought guestworkers immigration reform legislation known as the Immigration Reform and Control Act (IRCA), which promised permanent legal status for all “alien farmworkers.” It also brought a huge $51 million courtroom victory and unprecedented attention in newsprint, books, and on film. Yet the 1980s ended up being a decade of devastating disappointment. Cane cutters—and only cane cutters—were excluded from the congressional “amnesty” for immigrants; court appeals denied them the back wages awards they had won; and machines replaced them in the cane fields. For Jamaican guestworkers, the 1980s left the sort of bitter aftertaste that lasts a lifetime.
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"Laughing (at) Freaks: “Bending the tune to her will” in Angela Carter’s Nights at the Circus and Rosie Garland’s The Palace of Curiosities." In Neo-Victorian Humour, 296–322. Brill | Rodopi, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004336612_013.

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Reports on the topic "Bendigo Victoria"

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Kerrigan, Susan, Phillip McIntyre, and Marion McCutcheon. Australian Cultural and Creative Activity: A Population and Hotspot Analysis: Bendigo. Queensland University of Technology, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/rep.eprints.206968.

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Bendigo, where the traditional owners are the Dja Dja Wurrung people, has capitalised on its European historical roots. Its striking architecture owes much to its Gold Rush past which has also given it a diverse cultural heritage. The creative industries, while not well recognised as such, contribute well to the local economy. The many festivals, museums and library exhibitions attract visitors from the metropolitan centre of Victoria especially. The Bendigo Creative Industries Hub was a local council initiative while the Ulumbarra Theatre is located within the City’s 1860’s Sandhurst Gaol. Many festivals keep the city culturally active and are supported by organisations such as Bendigo Bank. The Bendigo Writers Festival, the Bendigo Queer Film Festival, The Bendigo Invention & Innovation Festival, Groovin the Moo and the Bendigo Blues and Roots Music Festival are well established within the community. A regional accelerator and Tech School at La Trobe University are touted as models for other regional Victorian cities. The city has a range of high quality design agencies, while the software and digital content sector is growing with embeddeds working in agriculture and information management systems. Employment in Film, TV and Radio and Visual Arts has remained steady in Bendigo for a decade while the Music and Performing Arts sector grew quite well over the same period.
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Donati, Kelly, and Nick Rose. Growing Edible Cities and Towns: A Survey of the Victorian Urban Agriculture Sector. Sustain: The Australian Food Network, October 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.57128/miud6079.

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This report presents findings from a survey of urban agriculture practitioners in greater Melbourne (including green wedge areas), Bendigo, Ballarat and Geelong. The findings provide baseline data regarding the composition, activities, market channels, challenges, needs and aspirations of the urban agriculture sector, as well as opportunities for its support and growth. The report also proposes a roadmap for addressing critical challenges that face the sector and for building on the strength of its social and environmental commitments, informed by the survey findings and relevant academic literature on urban agriculture. This report’s findings and recommendations are of relevance to policymakers at all levels of government, especially as food security, climate change, human and ecological health and urban sustainability emerge as key interconnected priorities in this challenging decade.
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