Academic literature on the topic 'Building laws Victoria'

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Journal articles on the topic "Building laws Victoria"

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van der Knaap, M., F. C. Roest, and M. Munawar. "Great Lake Victoria fisheries: Changes and sustainability, and Building Blocks for Management." Aquatic Ecosystem Health & Management 10, no. 4 (November 26, 2007): 481–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14634980701764456.

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Ellis, Joyce, John Walton, and Richard Rodger. "Roger H. Harper, Victorian Building Regulations: Summary Tables of the Principal English Building Acts and Model By-Laws, 1840–1914. London: Mansell, 1985. xxxvii + 137 pp." Urban History 13 (May 1986): 214–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0963926800008476.

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McCrystal, Shae, and Belinda Smith. "Industrial Legislation in 2010." Journal of Industrial Relations 53, no. 3 (June 2011): 288–302. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0022185611402004.

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Two themes in legislative activity in 2010 were national uniformity and some movement in using law to promote equality, especially gender equality. The Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth) came into full effect with the commencement of the new safety net provisions and the referral to the Commonwealth of industrial relations powers over private-sector workforces in all states except Western Australia. Progress continued on the promised harmonization of Australian occupational health and safety laws with the release of a model Work Health and Safety Bill by Safe Work Australia, although developments in some states threaten to derail the process. An attempt to repeal most of the industry-specific regulation of the building and construction industry failed. The Federal Parliament passed legislation establishing a national paid parental leave scheme, and a number of changes to federal discrimination laws came into effect or were proposed, including the potential consolidation of federal discrimination legislation. This article provides an overview of these developments at federal level and concludes with a discussion of developments in the states including a brief overview of Victoria’s new equal opportunity legislation.
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Kull, Irene. "Dear reader,." Juridica International 31 (October 25, 2022): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.12697/ji.2022.31.00.

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Dear reader, In 2022, we are celebrating several important anniversaries related to the adoption of laws important for the building of the Estonian legal order. Against the backdrop of a major forum for the Estonian legal profession – Estonian Lawyers’ Days 100 – this year’s edition is dedicated to another important anniversary: the 70th birthday of the University of Tartu’s Professor Emeritus Paul Varul. It is difficult to overestimate Prof. Varul’s contribution to the rebuilding of the Estonian legal system after regaining of independence. In this connection, I would like to draw special attention to his belief in young lawyers. Thanks to his support, many of the students from those days now hold positions that play an essential role in the legal profession. It is precisely this belief in young people alongside respect for more seasoned peers that Prof. Varul’s colleagues and students alike have inherited from him. In addition, there are many important qualities to be learnt from his example, such as the importance of infinite kindness and patience, the fundaments of academic ability, and the value of charm and personality. While he was the main architect of Estonia’s civil-law system in general, Prof. Varul’s favourite area of attention over the years has always been bankruptcy law, which he has been intimately involved in reforming. His willingness to speak up and actively contribute to the legislative process is testimony to the jubilarian’s thoughtfulness and continuing high level of professionalism. In this edition of the journal, readers will find an article by Chirstoph G. Paulus, a long-time colleague of Prof. Varul, which is dedicated to bankruptcy law. It provides a historical overview of the relationship between debtors and creditors and analyzes the contracting process as eternal struggle for supremacy. Silvia Kaugia and Raul Narits devote their article to finding an answer to the question of how to create a law that corresponds to the idea of law. In this issue, the reader can also find a paper written by Katre Luhamaa and Merike Ristikivi about the role of the judiciary in the transitional debates, judicial reform, and changes in the professional requirements set for judges in Estonia. Modern problems of the independence of the judiciary are reflected upon specifically in an article contributed by Jesús Manuel Villegas Fernández and Victoria Rodríguez-Blanco, and Anneli Albi’s article examines another angle of the ongoing evolution: the changing role of courts in Europe – which is shifting from protecting the fundamental rights of individuals toward protection of the neoliberal economic order. Alongside these pieces are three articles dedicated to matters of criminal law. Mari‑Liis Tohvelmann and Kristjan Kask have focused their contribution on interviews with children as evidence in criminal proceedings; Carri Ginter and Anneli Soo offer the reader a meaningful analysis of the arguments for and against the criminalisation of hate speech; and, finally, Mario Truu discusses the principle of foreseeability of liability and punishment in the practice of the ECHR. The volume meshes well with Prof. Varul’s ethos in one other respect too: doctoral students have had a say in the publication, representing younger voices. One can find a discussion centred on the need to use artificial intelligence in the context of deciding on the patent­ability of an invention, provided by Liva Rudzite, and the concept of the duty of diligence in procurement law from the standpoint of CJEU practice is tackled by Kadri Härginen. Finally, the fine tradition of publishing opinions by official opponents in public defence of doctoral dissertations has been maintained, with the opinion written by Marta Otto on the dissertation of Seili Suder. Congratulations to Professor Emeritus Paul Varul and to all who have had the opportunity to know him. We are all richer for your work.
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Boxshall, Anthony. "Perspectives on building climate resilience via marine and coastal management from the governance frontline in Victoria, Australia." Ocean & Coastal Management 228 (September 2022): 106291. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2022.106291.

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Emison, W. B., C. M. White, V. G. Hurley, and D. J. Brimm. "Factors Influencing the Breeding Distribution of the Peregrine Falcon in Victoria, Australia." Wildlife Research 24, no. 4 (1997): 433. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/wr96066.

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Since 1950, 199 nesting sites of peregrine falcons (Falco peregrinus) have been found in Victoria. Over half (51%) are on natural cliffs, 37% in trees and 12% on human-made structures and stone quarry faces. Most eyries on natural cliffs occur in the uplands (>200 m elevation) or along the coast. Tree eyries are located in hollows and in stick nests of other birds; most of these are within the distributions of red gums and belahs. Human-made structures (other than quarries) supporting nests include dam walls, silos, electricity pylons and buildings. Factors believed to influence the breeding distribution of peregrine falcons in Victoria are discussed; these include volcanic activity, landform and elevation, water, vegetation, climate, other birds and humans. The influence of human activities on the distribution of nesting peregrine falcons appears to have been positive. However, the future of the population of peregrine falcons nesting in tree hollows is of concern: it is likely that large trees with nest hollows will be destroyed or will fall from decay long before sufficient numbers of replacement trees are available.
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De'Ath, Sophie, Catherine Anne Flynn, and Melanie Field-Pimm. "Building Knowledge of Consumer Participation in Criminal Justice in Australia: A Case Study." International Journal for Crime, Justice and Social Democracy 7, no. 1 (March 1, 2018): 76–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/ijcjsd.v7i1.396.

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This exploratory study investigates the various factors to be considered when developing and implementing consumer participation in community-based criminal justice settings. The study uses the Victorian Association for the Care and Resettlement of Offenders (VACRO), based in Melbourne, Australia, as its case study site as this organisation is in the process of formally introducing consumer participation. The study is informed by previous research in key areas related to criminal justice, focusing on the perspectives of various stakeholders: staff, volunteers, and consumers. A mixed method approach offered a range of opportunities for participants to engage with the research. Thematic analysis identified multi-layered issues need to be considered when implementing consumer participation. Poor individual understanding was noted as a barrier, alongside a limited shared vision of the concept. These were seen to be influenced by practical issues such as high staff turnover and conceptual challenges, notably the existing discourse around offenders. The implications of these findings for further research on consumer participation in the criminal justice setting are explored.
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Healey, Lucy, Cathy Humphreys, and Keran Howe. "Inclusive Domestic Violence Standards: Strategies to Improve Interventions for Women With Disabilities?" Violence and Victims 28, no. 1 (2013): 50–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1891/0886-6708.28.1.50.

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Women with disabilities experience violence at greater rates than other women, yet their access to domestic violence services is more limited. This limitation is mirrored in domestic violence sector standards, which often fail to include the specific issues for women with disabilities. This article has a dual focus: to outline a set of internationally transferrable standards for inclusive practice with women with disabilities affected by domestic violence; and report on the results of a documentary analysis of domestic violence service standards, codes of practice, and practice guidelines. It draws on the Building the Evidence (BtE) research and advocacy project in Victoria, Australia in which a matrix tool was developed to identify minimum standards to support the inclusion of women with disabilities in existing domestic violence sector standards. This tool is designed to interrogate domestic violence sector standards for their attention to women with disabilities.
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Singleton, GR. "Population Dynamics of Mus Musculus and Its Parasites in Mallee Wheatlands in Victoria During and After a Drought." Wildlife Research 12, no. 3 (1985): 437. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/wr9850437.

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The population dynamics and cestodes, nematodes, ticks and fleas of wild mice in mallee wheatlands in Victoria, Australia, were monitored every 6th week from November 1982 to November 1983. Presence of Acarina and Nosopsyllus spp. in a total of 355 mice from farm buildings, crops and near permanent water was independent of that of Hymenolepis fraterna, Taenia taeniaeformis, Aspiculuris tetraptera, Syphacia obvelata and Muspicea borreli. S. obvelata was recorded in every habitat throughout all seasons (although its prevalence was significantly higher in winter near permanent water) and was the most prevalent helminth (67.0%). Overall prevalences of H. fraterna, T. taeniaeformis, A. tetraptera and M. borreli were 7.0, 5.3, 6.2 and 1.7% resp. The overall prevalence of the ticks Radfordia affinis and Myobia murismusculi was 93.9% and that of Nosopsyllus spp. was 36.7%. Other ticks were found on 39.8% of mice. The number of parasite species and prevalence of infection were lowest during severe drought in summer. After the drought parasite prevalence increased significantly . Prevalence of some species differed with habitat, both within and between seasons, but the reasons for the differences were unclear. Prevalence and intensity of parasitism was independent of mouse population density. Muspicea borreli is recorded from Australia for the first time. ADDITIONAL ABSTRACT: The population dynamics and parasite fauna of wild Mus musculus were monitored every 6th week from November 1982 to November 1983 in the mallee wheatlands of northwest Victoria. Endo- and ectoparasites were examined in 355 mice sampled from farm buildings, crops and around permanent water. The presence of ectoparasites (myobiid mites and fleas of the genus Nosopsyllus) was independent of that of endoparasites (nasal mites, cestodes and nematodes). The number of parasite species and prevalence of infection were lowest in summer, a period of severe drought. After the drought, seasonal differences in the number of parasite species were not significant but the prevalence of parasite infection increased significantly. The prevalence and mean intensity of infection varied for each parasite species. The prevalence of many species differed with habitat, both within and between seasons. Generally, reasons for these differences were not clear. The prevalence and intensity of parasitism was independent of mouse population density.
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Metelyova, T., and V. Soloshenko. "Theoretical and Methodological Foundations of the Memory Policy in the Global Context: History and Modernity." Problems of World History, no. 6 (October 30, 2018): 25–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.46869/2707-6776-2018-6-2.

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The article is an analytical review of the evolution of historical and collective memory issues and of the development of memory studies. The analysis of the scientific achievements in the field ofmemory studies has revealed the ineffably selective nature of collective memory, in which its work for restoration of the Past is carried out according to the laws and needs of the Modernity. Thus, thepoliticization of the Past is an integral part of its functioning in the Present. In the countries of young democracy the increase of the degree of politicization of the Past is also determined by the logic of the nation-building processes. It was revealed that sacred and mythological nature of the “heroic narrative” is serving as the identification basis for the community and the “reference point” is associated with it. That is why very often the moment when “everything began” causes the deployment of “wars of memory” around them. In the context of globalization the “war of memory” goes beyondnational borders and turns into a factor of interstate relations. It is found that in the modern world in the field of memory politics a global consensus has already been formed, and it is based on theprinciples of the universality of human rights, freedom and democracy. This causes a change in the earlier memory narratives, which were based on images of victories and triumphs, by the narratives ofhistorical trauma and sacrifice.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Building laws Victoria"

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Mumford, Peter John. "Enhancing performance-based regulation : lessons from New Zealand's building control system : a thesis submitted to the Victoria University of Wellington in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy [in Public Policy] /." ResearchArchive@Victoria e-Thesis, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/10063/1206.

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Books on the topic "Building laws Victoria"

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Victoria. Office of the Auditor-General. Building control in Victoria: Setting sound foundations. Melbourne, Vic: Victorian Auditor-General's Office, 2000.

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Victorian building regulations: Summary tables of the principal English Building Acts and Model By-laws, 1840-1914. London: Mansell Pub., 1985.

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Toronto (Ont.). Urban Development Services. University of Toronto area plan: Including lands of federated universities (St. Michael's, Trinity, Victoria), affiliated colleges, Queen's Park, Ontario Legislature, Royal Ontario Museum, Clarke Institute, Addiction Research Foundation, other institutions and private landowners. Toronto: Urban Development Services, 1997.

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Healey, Lucy. Building the evidence: A report on the status of policy and practice in responding to violence against women with disabilities in Victoria. Melbourne: Victorian Women with Disabilities Network Advocacy Information Service, 2008.

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Ordax, Salvador Andrés. Carrión de los Condes: Iglesia de Santa María del Camino. [Palencia]: Excma. Diputación Provincial de Palencia, 1994.

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Warren, Diane, and Laura Peters, eds. Rereading Orphanhood. Edinburgh University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474464369.001.0001.

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Building on the legacy of Laura Peters’ landmark work, Orphan Texts (2000), and extending its analyses to new work in family, marriage and kinship studies, Rereading Orphanhood: Texts Inheritance, Kin explores the ways in which the figure of the literary orphan can be used to illuminate our understanding of the long nineteenth century, especially in relation to family and kinship. Contributors to this highly cohesive collection examine the shifting status of orphanhood as a cultural construction and show how much those fluctuating definitions reveal about the cultural preoccupations and anxieties of their day. Correspondingly, the sense that the orphan condition inflects the individual character’s thought processes and actions, throughout their lives, is also a recurrent trope in these chapters. Some contributors also emphasise the enduring influence of nineteenth-century conceptualisations of orphanhood and kinship, seen in, but not limited to, work on the posthuman and neo-Victorian texts. Read collectively, the chapters explore how orphan characters (both child and adult) contribute to discourses of gender, home, family, law, inheritance, class, illegitimacy, charity, notions of the human and the development of the novel, across a wide range of canonical and non-canonical texts. As Talia Schaffer notes: ‘This collection is theoretically astute and usefully varied, and will reward anyone interested in family dynamics in the literature of the nineteenth century’.
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Book chapters on the topic "Building laws Victoria"

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Ikenberry, G. John. "The Settlement of 1919." In After Victory, 117–62. Princeton University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691169217.003.0005.

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This chapter assesses the order building in the settlement of 1919. The United States emerged as the leading world power after World War I, and it brought an ambitious institutional agenda aimed at binding democratic states together in a universal rule-based association. They envisioned a worldwide organization of democracies—a League of Nations—operating according to more demanding rules and obligations. The great powers would still form the core of this democratic community, but power balancing would be replaced by more legal- and rule-based mechanisms of power management and dispute resolution. However, Woodrow Wilson's stubborn convictions about the sources of law and institutions, the poor exercise of American power, and missed opportunities were enough to doom the settlement, particularly in the face of conflicting interests among the allies.
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"Introduction: Character-Building: Narrative Theory, Narrative Jurisprudence, and the Idea of Character." In Character, Writing, and Reputation in Victorian Law and Literature, 1–30. Edinburgh University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781474485722-002.

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Rush Smith, Nicholas. "Spectacles of Statecraft." In Contradictions of Democracy, 57–80. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190847180.003.0004.

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Why was the democratic state unable to monopolize violence despite massive judicial reforms? By considering the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, one of the most important early state-building institutions, the chapter shows the state has had difficulty disciplining relations between citizens such that they would turn to the law to resolve disputes rather than violently doing so themselves. Specifically, it examines the Victor Kheswa hearings in Sebokeng where, despite Kheswa’s alleged involvement in one of the worst massacres in South African history, his mother was put on stage as a victim of human rights abuses. The chapter argues that by proclaiming Kheswa’s mother as a victim, the TRC went against local notions of justice, as she was widely considered to be an enabler of violence, not a victim. This infelicitous performance mirrored the state’s challenges in getting citizens to turn to the law for justice, as many citizens considered suspects’ procedural rights as putting the law on the side of criminals.
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Brunstetter, Daniel R. "Jus post vim Revisited." In Just and Unjust Uses of Limited Force, 235–54. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192897008.003.0008.

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This chapter revisits the theme of jus post vim in the non-ideal form. It begins by looking at the grey area between vim success and failure, characterized by shaky containment (the lingering doubt that the enemy is really contained) or by persistent contested order that threatens the ability of law enforcement mechanisms to uphold a minimalist view of order in certain states. Among the vim failures are the unjust escalation to war, the unfazed enemy outcome, the recurring last straw scenario, and the intractable contested and fragmented sovereignty dilemma. The chapter continues by exploring jus ex vi, or the ethical consideration of terminating the use of limited force, further to tease out what success and failure might look like. The key to defining success and knowing when to end vim operations depends on the just management of military risk principle. The chapter concludes by exploring moral options in cases of failure. Building on the observation that framing the use of force as punishment can be more restrictive than open-ended justifications based in self-defense constructed as prevention or protection against future acts of aggression, the chapter concludes by arguing states might have recourse to the punishment principles. Drawn from an interpretation of the just war tradition privileging a presumption against war as being at the heart of just war thinking, the escalation management and demonstrable retribution criteria depict the narrow moral logic where the legitimate goal of limited force is something other than the moral truncated victory of jus post vim.
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Conference papers on the topic "Building laws Victoria"

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Wen, Wei. "Focusing on Poverty Alleviation to Secure a Decisive Victory in Building a Moderately Prosperous Society in all Respects —Based on Targeted Poverty Alleviation in Hunan Province." In Proceedings of the 2018 3rd International Conference on Politics, Economics and Law (ICPEL 2018). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/icpel-18.2018.120.

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Harper, Glenn. "Becoming Ultra-Civic: The Completion of Queen’s Square, Sydney 1962-1978." In The 38th Annual Conference of the Society of Architectural Historians Australia and New Zealand. online: SAHANZ, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.55939/a4009pijuv.

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Declaring in the late 1950s that Sydney City was in much need of a car free civic square, Professor Denis Winston, Australia’s first chair in town and country planning at the University of Sydney, was echoing a commonly held view on how to reconfigure the city for a modern-day citizen. Queen’s Square, at the intersection of Macquarie Street and Hyde Park, first conceived in 1810 by Governor Lachlan Macquarie, remained incomplete until 1978 when it was developed as a pedestrian only plaza by the NSW Government Architect under a different set of urban intentions. By relocating the traffic bound statue of Queen Victoria (1888) onto the plaza and demolishing the old Supreme Court complex (1827), so that nearby St James’ Church (1824) could becoming freestanding alongside a new multi-storey Commonwealth Supreme Court building (1975), by the Sydney-based practise of McConnel Smith and Johnson, the civic and social ambition of this pedestrian space was assured. Now somewhat overlooked in the history of Sydney’s modern civic spaces, the adjustment in the design of this square during the 1960s translated the reformed urban design agenda communicated in CIAM 8, the heart of the city (1952), a post-war treatise developed and promoted by the international architect and polemicist, Josep Lluis Sert. This paper examines the completion of Queen’s Square in 1978. Along with the symbolic role of the project, that is, to provide a plaza as a social instrument in humanising the modern-day city, this project also acknowledged the city’s colonial settlement monuments beside a new law court complex; and in a curious twist in fate, involving curtailing the extent of the proposed plaza so that the colonial Supreme Court was retained, the completion of Queen’s Square became ultra – civic.
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