Academic literature on the topic 'Northern Territory'

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Journal articles on the topic "Northern Territory"

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Carment, David. "Northern Territory." Australian Journal of Politics & History 50, no. 2 (June 2004): 301–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8497.2004.247_8.x.

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Jaensch, Dean. "Northern Territory." Australian Cultural History 28, no. 1 (April 2010): 103–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07288430903164942.

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Blokland, Jenny. "Northern Territory." Alternative Law Journal 31, no. 2 (June 2006): 95–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1037969x0603100209.

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Hatton, Steve. "Northern Territory." Children Australia 15, no. 2 (1990): 53–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1035077200002789.

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McEwan, Beryl. "Northern Territory." Australian College of Midwives Incorporated Journal 5, no. 2 (June 1992): 24–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s1031-170x(05)80111-4.

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McEwan, Beryl. "Northern Territory." Australian College of Midwives Incorporated Journal 4, no. 3 (December 1991): 25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s1031-170x(05)80232-6.

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Heatley, Alistair. "NORTHERN TERRITORY." Australian Journal of Public Administration 44, no. 2 (June 1985): 184–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8500.1985.tb02440.x.

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Trollope, David. "NORTHERN TERRITORY." Australian Journal of Public Administration 46, no. 2 (June 1987): 247–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8500.1987.tb01437.x.

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Trollope, David. "NORTHERN TERRITORY." Australian Journal of Public Administration 47, no. 2 (June 1988): 191–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8500.1988.tb01058.x.

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Hamilton, Stephen, and David Carment. "The Northern Territory Press." Media International Australia 150, no. 1 (February 2014): 56–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1329878x1415000113.

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The history of print media in the Northern Territory is one of parish pumps and media moguls, Cold War tensions and human rights crusades. Locally printed and published newspapers have been pivotal to the development of a Northern Territory identity and the cultivation of the Territory's sense of difference from the rest of Australia. From the earliest newspapers – part news-sheet, part government gazette – to the colourful online edition of the NT News, the Territory has been defined by its press and has in turn defined it, in response to its remoteness and to its increasing non-Indigenous population. This article provides a brief overview of the Northern Territory press, the history of which remains poorly documented.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Northern Territory"

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Macoun, Alissa. "Aboriginality and the Northern Territory intervention." Thesis, University of Queensland, 2012. https://eprints.qut.edu.au/65357/1/Macoun_phd_finalthesis.pdf.

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This thesis examines the construction of Aboriginality in recent public policy reasoning through identifying representations deployed by architects and supporters of the Commonwealth’s 2007 Northern Territory Emergency Response (the intervention). Debate about the Northern Territory intervention was explicitly situated in relation to a range of ideas about appropriate Government policy towards Indigenous people, and particularly about the nature, role, status, value and future of Aboriginality and of Aboriginal people and Torres Strait Islanders. This project involves analysis of constructions of Aboriginality deployed in texts created and circulated to explain and justify the policy program. The aim of the project is to identify the ideas about Aboriginality deployed by the intervention’s architects and supporters, and to examine the effects and implications of these discourses for political relationships between Indigenous people and settlers in Australia. This thesis will argue that advocates of the Northern Territory intervention construct Aboriginality in a range of important ways that reassert and reinforce the legitimacy of the settler colonial order and the project of Australian nationhood, and operate to limit Aboriginal claims. Specifically, it is argued that in linking Aboriginality to the abuse of Aboriginal children, the intervention’s advocates and supporters establish a political debate about the nature and future of Aboriginality within a discursive terrain in which the authority and perspectives of Indigenous people are problematised. Aboriginality is constructed in this process as both temporally and spatially separated from settler society, and in need of coercive integration into mainstream economic and political arrangements. Aboriginality is depicted by settler advocates of intervention as an anachronism, with Aboriginal people and cultures understood as primitive and/or savage precursors to settlers who are represented as modern and civilised. As such, the communities seen as the authentic home or location of Aboriginality represent a threat to Aboriginal children as well as to settlers. These constructions function to obscure the violence of the settler order, provide justification or moral rehabilitation for the colonising project, and reassert the sovereignty of the settler state. The resolution offered by the intervention’s advocates is a performance or enactment of settler sovereignty, representing a claim over and through both the territory of Aboriginal people and the discursive terrain of nationhood.
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Fried, Ofra. "Cross cultural issues in the medical management and nursing care of terminally ill Aboriginal people in Central Australia." Thesis, University of Sydney, 2000. https://hdl.handle.net/2123/24340.

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This research documents, for the first time, the experiences of non-Aboriginal primary health workers caring for terminally ill Aboriginal patients in Central Australia. Despite the high mortality amongst Aboriginal Territorians, issues around terminal illness, death and bereavement have been little studied. The area is sensitive in both cultural and human terms. Many clients of the local health care services are Aboriginal people whereas most nurses and doctors are non-Aboriginal. Their clinical interactions are inherently cross cultural and are additionally influenced by several sequelae of Australian colonial history, including socioeconomic and status disparity between participants and entrenched discriminatory attitudes and practices. The study was approached from the perspective of the new public health, informed by the philosophy of contemporary palliative care and aimed to contribute to the development of a culturally safe practice for the care of terminally ill Aboriginal people. Data was collected using a qualitative method of serial interviews with a representative sample of primary health care workers with an Aboriginal clientele. The study found that cultural factors were important determinants of good health care communication, the making of appropriate end-of-life care decisions and the provision of quality case management and bereavement support. Significant cultural issues for achieving a “good death” included recognition of the wish of many Aboriginal people to die on their own country and of the value of the Aboriginal kinship system for enabling care decisions and providing care. To date however, these have had little formal impact on the design or delivery of health care services for terminally ill Aboriginal people in Central Australia. Nurses and doctors interviewed for this study considered Aboriginal patients’ access to quality health care during a terminal illness to be inadequate and inequitable. The difficulties of providing health care in remote areas impacted disproportionately on Aboriginal clients. Their treatment options were limited by their poverty and by institutional policies determining the availability of resources. Cultural and language mis-communication between Aboriginal clients and non-Aboriginal health professionals impaired the process of decision making and the delivery of care. The hegemony of the majority culture and its health care institutions disempowered Aboriginal clients while entrenched discriminatory social attitudes perpetuated inequitable practices. Specific service gaps were identified in the availability of interpreter services, transportation, respite care, domiciliary nursing and bereavement support. The wider care network, including hospitals, nursing homes, multidisciplinary health care providers, and the transport needed for remote clients to access these, was inequitably available and insufficiently accommodating of Aboriginal cultural needs. The existing palliative care services employed no Aboriginal staff. Improving care will therefore require a range of institutional and societal responses, including addressing service gaps, providing practical responses to cultural aspects of service provision, and continuing to work towards reconciliation. A major deficit was found in the training and support available to practitioners caring for terminally ill Aboriginal people. Addressing this requires a policy shift by health care institutions. The most useful training interventions included directing non-Aboriginal workers toward local sources of cultural information, dispelling myths and stereotyping and assisting in exploring ethical issues arising from cross cultural conflict. Practitioners also needed support both in analysing difficult care situations so as to arrive at practical management solutions and in debriefing their emotional responses. This would reduce the stress of providing cross cultural terminal care and improve service delivery. Palliative care in Central Australia can only be developed with input from both Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal participants. It cannot be progressed without the guidance and support of Aboriginal workers and community members, which requires Aboriginal empowerment at all levels of planning and decision making. This reflection on the nature of cross cultural terminal care, from the viewpoint of professionals within the majority culture, will contribute to the development of a culturally safe practice for working with Aboriginal colleagues and clients.
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Wan, Xinan. "Epidemiology of hepatitis B infection in the Northern Territory of Australia." Thesis, The University of Sydney, 1994. https://hdl.handle.net/2123/26716.

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From August 1989 to may 1993, extensive studies on the epidemiology of hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection in the Northern Territory were conducted by means of community-based surveys, morbidity and mortality data review and mathematical modelling. The incidence of clinically apparent acute HBV infection in the Top End was 12 per 100,000 per annum, with a marked ethnic difference between Aborigines (42 per 100,000) and non—Aborigines (4 per 100,000), and an odds ratio of 10.4 (95% confidence intervals 3.2-33.8). Sixty percent of Aboriginal cases of acute hepatitis B occurred in children less than 10 years of age, whereas non-Aboriginal cases occurred in adults aged 20-29, mostly with behavioural risk factors. These findings confirm the importance of immunising Aboriginal children to reduce the future incidence of hepatitis B infection and hepatoma. Average incidence rate of primary hepatocellular carcinoma (PHC) was 5.2 per 100,000 for the Aboriginal population and 0.5 per 100,000 for the non-Aboriginal population, giving a relative risk of 10.4 (95% confidence intervals, 4.0—26.7). However, the incidence of PHC was not significantly different between Aboriginal Australians aged 40 and over (30.9 per 100,000) and persons from high risk areas such as Southern Europe, Asia or the Pacific (18.9 per 100,000) (X2l = 0.97, P > 0.05). PHC was more frequent in males (2.3 per 100,000) than in females (0.7 per 100,000), with the relative risk of 3.4 (95% confidence intervals 1.3—9.3). The incidence of PHC increased with age in Aboriginal and non—Aboriginal people; the trend was statistically significant in Aborigines (X2l =. 4.74, P < 0.05) but not in non-Aborigines (X2l = 3.43, P > 0.05). The study showed that 63.6% of Aboriginal cases and 50.0% of non-Aboriginal cases of PHC had evidence of hepatitis B surface antigen positivity. This prevalence of the virus in Aboriginal patients with carcinoma (63.6%) was much higher than that seen in Aborigines from community-based surveys (13.1%) (X2l = 21.7, P < 0.001). The results indicate the importance of hepatitis B in the aetiology of PHC in Aboriginal people, and the importance of immunisation for its prevention. Serological markers of HBV infection were detected in 28.7% of‘school children (46.9% of 439 Aborigines, 13.7% of 556 children from the "low prevalence" groups and 32.1% of 109 "other" ethnic groups). There was evidence of HBV infection in 12.8% of school staff from "low prevalence" ethnic backgrounds and in 37.9% of teachers from other ethnic (including Aboriginal) backgrounds. in Northern Territory schools, the prevalence of HBV infection is high in children and school staff from ethnic groups previously known to be at higher risk of HBV infection. For students and staff from ethnic backgrounds expected to be at low risk, HBV prevalence is greater than in individuals from similar backgrounds in other parts of Australia. These data suggest that horizontal transmission of HBV occurs in school settings in the Northern Territory, and strengthen the rationale for HBV immunisation of all children and staff at schools. Such a policy would also be applicable to other situations where there is contact between ethnic groups with high and low rates of HBV infection. The immunogenicity of a recombinant hepatitis B vaccine (Engerix B) was examined in Aboriginal children four years after the introduction of universal vaccination for Aboriginal infants. Among 612 vaccinees, 375 (61.3%[95% confidence intervals 57.3% — 65.1%l) seroconverted (anti—HBs titres greater than or equal to 100 mIU/ml). There was a rapid decline in anti-HBs levels in Aboriginal children with time since immunisation; 7.8% of children appeared to revert to seronegative status for each year that had elapsed since the first vaccine dose. The overall response to hepatitis B vaccination in Aborigines was less than in other reported groups; this may be due to cold-chain failure in specific communities, to impaired responses reflecting malnutrition and genetic influence, and to titres which fall more rapidly over time. Multivariate analysis showed that geographic region, increasing birthweight and delayed timing of the first vaccine dose after birth were predictors of increased antibody response to the vaccine; but that timing of the second and third doses did not significantly affect response. These findings have practical implications; firstly, the considerable flexibility in timing of hepatitis B vaccine doses makes it possible to integrate this vaccine with other childhood vaccines and to resume vaccination schedules when vaccinees miss the second or third doses; secondly, there is a need to evaluate the requirement for a booster dose of vaccine in Aboriginal children; and to improve the cold chain in those communities where seroconversion rates were lowest. Epidemiological models were used to estimate rates of horizontal and vertical transmission of hepatitis B virus in a mixed race Australian community.
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Moros, León Josè Saul. "Reservoir geometry and architecture in Ordovican fluvio-marine sandstones : P3B unit, Pacoota formation, Amadeus Basin, Central Australia." Thesis, Queensland University of Technology, 1998. https://eprints.qut.edu.au/37017/1/37017_Moros%20Leon_1998_v1.pdf.

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Detailed facies analysis and sequence stratigraphic principles applied to outcrop and subsurface data have aided in the development of a reservoir geological model for the Pacoota P3B Unit at the Mereenie Field, Central Australia. Mereenie is a linear Northwest/southeast trending oil and gas field 4 km wide and 35 km long, and covers an area of approximately 130 km2. In this field, oil and gas are produced from some of the oldest known petroleum reservoirs in the word: reservoirs approximately 500Ma. The Ordovician Pacoota P3B Unit, is part of an overall transgressive succession which records the transition from non-marine to marine environments in the northeastern margin of the Amadeus Basin. This transgression was punctuated by episodic events of rapid sea level rise and periods of sea level fall. The resulting vertical succession consists of three Fourth-order deltaic sequences formed by the regular alternation of sand-prone, non-marine sediments with marine mud/sand-prone deposits that prograded northeast as the basin subsided. Unlike previous investigations, this study recognizes four distinct types of sandstone facies associations within the broad braid delta system that characterizes the Pacoota P3B Unit. Facies Association 1 records the depositional characteristics of a distal braid plain that was dominated by episodic sheetflood events. Facies Association 2 reflects a sudden change in fluvial style from fine-grained sheetflood lobes to a coarse to pebbly-grained braid-delta system during a short-lived regressive phase. With time, this basal braid-delta system evolved into a tide-influenced braid plain indicating a transgressive phase. Facies Association 3 records the abrupt change from fluvial to tidal processes. This association is interpreted as the product of a tide-dominated delta front that prograded northeast. The palaeoenvironment of Facies Association 4 is interpreted as the fill of a wide incised fluvial valley system, which marked the end of fluvial sedimentation at the margin of the Amadeus Basin during the Ordovician. This association is capped by the transgressive marine deposits of the Pacoota P3A Unit. These four facies associations represent a complex network of depositional environments that results from the deposition of superimposed sandy, deltaic systems affected by tidal currents. The vertical facies evolution is punctuated by erosional sequence boundaries. The development of a detailed stratigraphic framework allows the Pacoota P3B Unit to be subdivided into five correlative intervals that define reservoir compartments in the Mereenie Field. These reservoir compartments are bounded by key stratigraphic surfaces and represent the lowstand (LST), transgressive (I'ST) and highstand (HST) systems tracts of the Fourth-order sequences defined within the P3B Unit. Maximum reservoir quality is associated with amalgamated fluvial sandstones that define the LST of each sequence. Marginal to impermeable reservoir characteristics occur within the tidally-influenced TST and HST. From base to top reservoir intervals are: P3-250, P3-230, P3-190, P3-150 and P3-120/130. Of these, the lowstand P3-120/130, P3-230 and P3-250 Reservoir Intervals are the most prolific producers. The transgressive to highstand P3-150 and P3-190 Reservoir Intervals are considered as not economically profitable for hydrocarbon exploitation. Petrophysical characterization of lithofacies types observed in the succession indicate that within each compartment, depositional facies exert the primary control on reservoir properties. Flow units are associated with tabular, cross-bedded sandstones. Permeability barriers are associated with bidirectional cross-beds, parallellaminated sandstones, soft-sediment deformed sandstones and bioturbated beds. During transgression the upper part of the lowstand fluvial system was sheared off resulting in a transgressive surface capping the fluvial deposits. Reworked fluvial sediments were redeposited as reversing tidal flows above the lowstand intervals. These deposits, interpreted as neap-spring tidal cycles, consist of alternating sand and silt/mud and bioturbated beds. In this setting, intense bioturbation generate sediment mixing destroying the reservoir properties of this interval. Additionally the areally continuous and impermeable silt/shale intervals of the tidal deposits contributed to the vertical barriers to flow in the reservoir. This study illustrates how facies analysis and high resolution sequence stratigraphy can be applied to improve reservoir characterization in fluvio-marine successions deposited before the existence of land vegetation. In the Mereenie Field, these concepts have been successfully applied to: i) recognize with confidence all correlative reservoir intervals and ·ii) identify, orientate and map the LST of the Fourth-order sequences which represent the major reservoir intervals of the P3B Unit.
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Greenfield, John Edward. "Migmatite formation at Mt. Stafford, Central Australia." Phd thesis, Department of Geology and Geophysics, 1997. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/10592.

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Jaross, Nandor. "Diabetic retinopathy in the Katherine region of the Northern Territory." Title page, contents and abstract only, 2003. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09PH/09phj376.pdf.

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"January 2003." Bibliography: 10.1-10.11 leaves. This thesis presents results from the Katherine Region Diabetic Retinopathy Study (1993-1996). These results provide the first detailed information on the basic epidemiology of diabetic retinopathy and impaired vision in an Aboriginal diabetic population.
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Scrimgeour, Ian. "Early Proterozoic metamorphism at the Granites gold mine, Northern Territory /." Adelaide, 1989. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09SB/09sbs434.pdf.

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Hodgson, Renata. "Perceptions of authenticity : Aboriginal cultural tourism in the Northern Territory." Thesis, View thesis, 2007. http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/32902.

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Since the 1970s there has been a growing interest in Indigenous cultures globally. In Australia, the recognition that Aboriginal art and culture represents a distinct component of Australian identity has resulted in increased promotion of Aboriginal cultures and heritage sites as unique tourist attractions, mainly since the 1990s. Research indicates that there is a significant international interest in Australian Indigenous cultures. In particular, it has been suggested that tourists want to experience ‘real’ Aboriginal culture and that they desire ‘authentic and genuine’ Aboriginal cultural experiences. Despite the fact that the concept of authenticity remains important to the different stakeholder groups of Aboriginal tourism, including tourists, tour operators and promoters as well as State/Territorial Governments, limited understanding exists as to what ‘authentic’ Aboriginal culture and, in particular, ‘authentic’ Aboriginal tourism experiences constitute in the minds of these stakeholders. Whilst an abundance of research exists that has addressed the issue of authenticity in different tourism settings, the majority of studies have treated the concept of authenticity as something given and have used quantitative tools to analyse the authentic-inauthentic binary. However, research utilising such methods has failed to uncover the different perspectives and meanings respondents may hold of the notion of authenticity. Notably, the perceptions of authenticity in Indigenous tourism have received little attention. The few existing studies on authenticity in Indigenous tourism settings have given emphasis to differing agendas, and have therefore provided only a piecemeal understanding of how authenticity is perceived and interpreted by the different stakeholders of Indigenous tourism. More importantly, research on Aboriginal hosts’ perceptions of authenticity is virtually non-existent. Yet, clarification of how tourists and hosts perceive authenticity in Aboriginal tourism is essential when addressing issues of accreditation and branding as well as key marketing objectives that aim to promote ‘authentic’ Aboriginal tourism experiences. This study seeks to address the gaps within the tourism literature surrounding authenticity in Aboriginal tourism. The aim is to understand the concept of authenticity in Aboriginal tourism from a stakeholder perspective. The study is guided by two main research questions: What are the perceptions of authenticity of tourists as well as tour providers and their employees? and Are theoretical perspectives of the notion of authenticity shared by those stakeholders? More specifically, this study investigated five important issues: 1) tourists’ perceptions of authenticity at three different Aboriginal cultural tours; 2) the perceptions of three Aboriginal cultural tour operators and their employees in regard to authenticity; 3) whether there were any discrepancies and/or similarities between the perceptions of tour operators/employees and tourists about what constitutes an authentic Aboriginal tourism experience; 4) whether any of the different theoretical perspectives of authenticity were shared by tourists and tour operators/employees; and 5) whether a conceptual framework could be developed that provides an overview of salient elements explaining the formation of perceptions of authenticity within Aboriginal cultural tourism experiences. In order to examine the research questions a qualitative research methodology grounded in the constructivist paradigm was adopted. This paradigm was chosen as it reflects the exploratory nature of the research and allows for flexibility throughout the research process. This study utilised qualitative in-depth semi-structured interviews as the primary data collection method together with participant observation. Data was collected from 92 interviews, consisting of 72 tourists and 20 employees, within three Aboriginal cultural tour companies in the Northern Territory. The three different Aboriginal cultural tours chosen for the purpose of this study were: Tiwi Tours at Bathurst Island, Manyallaluk Aboriginal Cultural Tours near Katherine and Anangu Tours at the Uluru-Kata-Tjuta National Park. The results of this research revealed that respondents hold multiple constructions of the notion of authenticity. In general, however, most respondents associated an authentic Aboriginal cultural tour experience with a genuine experience which does not feel contrived, staged or ‘plastic’. In particular, the study found that respondents’ perceptions of authenticity can be grouped into four elements. The first element consisted of the background and role of the Aboriginal tour guide, which was found to be a major factor influencing respondents’ perceptions on whether the tour was offering an authentic experience. The second element is characterised by the tourists’ search for ‘real’ and ‘genuine’ Aboriginal people. Here, respondents equated authenticity with the opportunity to visit a ‘real’ Aboriginal working community and to be able to experience Aboriginal people in an everyday setting. Respondents were found to hold preconceived notions and images in their minds as to who ‘real’ Aboriginal people are and what their ‘authentic’ lifestyle should involve. In addition, the majority of respondents defined authentic Aboriginal culture as the contemporary culture of Aboriginal people. Consequently, an authentic Aboriginal cultural tour experience was conceived in terms of gaining an insight into the contemporary lifestyle of Aboriginal people. The third element that contributed to the experience of authenticity is associated with having the opportunity to see and/or purchase authentic Aboriginal arts and crafts. Respondents perceived a product as authentic if it conformed to specific criteria, such as reflecting uniqueness and originality and being handmade by a local artist. Verification of authenticity was also generated by the shopping experience itself, for example meeting the artist and watching how the craft is produced. Finally, the fourth element in the construction of authenticity is related to tourists’ perceptions of the dance performance. Some respondents recognised this as a contrived experience that lacked ‘traditional’ authenticity, while some respondents wanted to see an authentically contrived or staged cultural performance as this was regarded as an occasion for entertainment and enjoyment. Furthermore, the findings of this study suggested that respondents generally referred to the authenticity of toured objects (object authenticity) when describing their perceptions of an authentic experience. The majority of tourists and employees employed a constructivist approach within their conceptualisation of the notion of authenticity. Only a small number of tourists appeared to hold attitudes similar to the objectivist and postmodern perspectives.
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Hodgson, Renata. "Perceptions of authenticity Aboriginal cultural tourism in the Northern Territory /." View thesis, 2007. http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/32902.

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Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Western Sydney, 2007.
A thesis presented to the University of Western Sydney, College of Business, School of Management, in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Includes bibliographies.
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Henderson, Ian. "Bureaucracy and Aboriginal peoples in the Northern Territory: 1900-1968." Thesis, Henderson, Ian (2002) Bureaucracy and Aboriginal peoples in the Northern Territory: 1900-1968. PhD thesis, Murdoch University, 2002. https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/50890/.

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From 1901 until 1968 the Commonwealth bureaucracy essentially ran the Northern Territory. The way the Territory was administered was dictated by the remoteness of the Government and the difficulty in communications, both within and outside of the Territory. This power facilitated a situation which pitted the dominant colonists and bureaucracy against the Aboriginal peoples in a conflict over scarce resources. The pastoralists required water for the stock; the Aboriginal Peoples required water to survive; the pastoralists and the miners needed cheap labour. Various methods were employed to discipline the People on the pastoral properties—provide ration stations designed to attracted the People from the wild and seduce them into a sedentary lifestyle; harassment by the police and an incomprehensible legal system administered in a foreign language; hound them into ‘reserves’, a euphemism for land that was seen as of no use to the colonisers or their stock. Finally assimilate them into the dominant race through a form of eugenics. My research transported me from expecting a simple ‘documentary reality’ relationship between the bureaucrats and the Aboriginal peoples towards a more conspiratorial connection between the dominant class, the bureaucracy and the Aboriginal Peoples. Paradoxically, these same pastoralists and miners were dependent on Aboriginal labour to enable their enterprises to be viable. To this end the bureaucracy administered laws that controlled standards of habitation, provision of food and clothing, and wage rates provided to the Aboriginal workers. The pastoralists and the miners observed such provisions in the breach, but other provisions controlling: where the Peoples could work and who they could work for, who they could marry, and where they could go were implemented assiduously. Working and living conditions for all but the Peoples in the most remote areas were bad to say the least. In the administration of the law the actions of certain police were horrific by any measure and the Supreme Court under Judge Wells made a mockery of justice and court procedures. The most celebrated case to come before the worthy judge was that of R. v Tuckiar, which was later appealed on the grounds of the judgement and court proceedings and gave rise to scathing criticism by the High Court Judges in unison. Of course, the ultimate expression of conflict between the bureaucracy and the Aboriginal Peoples was the doctrine of assimilation. This doctrine was designed to actively absorb the Aboriginal Peoples into the general Australian population along with their culture and languages. Resulting from a selective form of eugenics the so-called ‘stolen generations’ and its undesirable results have emerged. This thesis records much of that conflict through the eyes of the bureaucracy and to a lessor extent the Aboriginal Peoples themselves.
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Books on the topic "Northern Territory"

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Marie, Appleton, ed. Australia's Northern Territory. Adelaide, S.A: Savvas, 1988.

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Alcorta, Frank. Explore Australia's Northern Territory. 2nd ed. N.S.W: National Book Distributors and Publishers, 1994.

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John, Knight. The Northern Territory coast. Darwin: State Library of the Northern Territory, 1992.

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Alcorta, Frank. Explore Australia's Northern Territory. New South Wales: National Book Distributors & Publishers, 1995.

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Stephen, Gray. Criminal laws: Northern Territory. Annandale, NSW: Federation Press, 2004.

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Burt, Jocelyn. Discover the Northern Territory. Nedlands, W.A: Tuart House, 1995.

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Jaensch, Dean. The Legislative Council of the Northern Territory: An electoral history, 1947-1974. Darwin: Australian National University, North Australia Research Unit, 1990.

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Duminski, Marge. Southport Northern Territory 1869 - 2002. Casuarina, N.T: Historical Society of the Northern Territory, 2005.

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Jones, Timothy G. The Chinese in Northern Territory. Darwin, Australia: NTU Press, 1990.

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Rayner, Robert J. Darwin and Northern Territory Force. New South Wales: Rudder Press, 2001.

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Book chapters on the topic "Northern Territory"

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Bird, Eric. "Northern Territory." In Encyclopedia of the World's Coastal Landforms, 1267–78. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-8639-7_229.

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Wickler, Wolfgang. "In Australiens Northern Territory." In Reisenotizen, 189–203. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-61996-4_26.

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Short, Andrew D. "Western Northern Territory Region." In Australian Coastal Systems, 233–51. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-14294-0_7.

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Frahm, Michael. "Australia: Northern Territory Ombudsman." In Australasia and Pacific Ombudsman Institutions, 131–41. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-33896-0_9.

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Murtagh, Brendan. "Life in a Northern Town." In The Politics of Territory, 89–104. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781403920133_6.

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White, Susan Q., Nicholas J. White, and John A. Webb. "Northern Territory and Western Queensland." In Cave and Karst Systems of the World, 123–47. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-24267-0_8.

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Serita, Kentaro. "The Northern Territories (Kunashiri Island, Etorofu Island, the Habomai Islands, and Shikotan Island)." In The Territory of Japan, 37–62. Singapore: Springer Nature Singapore, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-99-3013-5_2.

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Muller, Janet. "Lessons Learned, Lessons Ignored: The Continuing Road to an Irish Language Act in Northern Ireland." In Language, Policy and Territory, 325–43. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-94346-2_17.

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Williams, Martin. "Northern Territory, Canberra and Sydney, Australia (1964–1984)." In Nile Waters, Saharan Sands, 37–44. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-25445-6_6.

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Davis, Graeme W., David J. Heard, and Ray E. Chatto. "Legislation in relation to herpetofauna in the Northern Territory." In Herpetology in Australia, 333–36. P.O. Box 20, Mosman NSW 2088, Australia: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.7882/rzsnsw.1993.051.

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Conference papers on the topic "Northern Territory"

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Lee, D. C., H. J. Milledge, T. H. Reddicliffe, B. H. Scott-Smith, W. R. Taylor, and L. M. Ward. "The Merlin kimberlites, Northern Territory, Australia." In International Kimberlite Conference. University of Alberta Library, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.29173/ikc1877.

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Kuzmina, E. Yu. "Briological studies in Northern Koryakia (Koryakskiy District, Kamchatka Territory)." In The international field workshop «Cryptogams of North Asia». SIPPB SB RAS, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.31255/cna.irk-16-17.

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Danyushevsky, L., P. Farias, J, Whelan, B. Reno, A. Cross, D. Huston, R. Maas, and T. Mernagh. "Base Metal Mineralisation of the Rover Field, Northern Territory." In Central Australian Basins Symposium IV. Petroleum Exploration Society of Australia (PESA), 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.36404/jpgc5409.

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The Warramunga Province of the Palaeoproterozoic North Australian Craton, in the central Northern Territory, represents a prospective terrane for mineral exploration. A well-known example is the Tennant Creek mineral field, which has a rich history of gold, copper, bismuth, silver, and selenium production. Some 80 km southwest of the Tennant Creek mineral field is the entirely undercover Rover field, which hosts base and precious metal deposits with established mineral resources (JORC). Despite this, the geological framework, nature and timing of mineral systems remains poorly understood.
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Gómez Cavazos, Enrique Esteban. "The route of company towns in Lower California: historic centers and industrial heritage." In Virtual City and Territory. Barcelona: Centre de Política de Sòl i Valoracions, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.5821/ctv.8120.

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Company towns in the peninsula of Baja California can be considered a tool for urban development from the late nineteenth till early twentieth century. The Mexican Government used the industrialization in northern Mexico as a strategy of economic occupation, a great challenge to occupy a peninsula scarcely populated. Major territorial concessions to foreign companies allow them to settle large industries, to build up company towns and industrial cities. In the article I analyze the occupation and development policy of this part of Mexico showing 10 cases where companies mapped cities in this territory. I defend the hypothesis that these cities may have new development opportunities due to the rich industrial heritage they contain.
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Nguyen, T. T. T., L. A. T. Nguyen, and G. E. M. Perdomo. "Methodology of Compartmentalization Analysis for Modelling - Mereenie Field, Northern Territory." In SPE/IATMI Asia Pacific Oil & Gas Conference and Exhibition. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/186433-ms.

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Waggitt, Peter, and Mike Fawcett. "Completion of the South Alligator Valley Remediation: Northern Territory, Australia." In ASME 2009 12th International Conference on Environmental Remediation and Radioactive Waste Management. ASMEDC, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/icem2009-16198.

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13 uranium mines operated in the South Alligator Valley of Australia’s Northern Territory between 1953 and 1963. At the end of operations the mines, and associated infrastructure, were simply abandoned. As this activity preceded environmental legislation by about 15 years there was neither any obligation, nor attempt, at remediation. In the 1980s it was decided that the whole area should become an extension of the adjacent World Heritage, Kakadu National Park. As a result the Commonwealth Government made an inventory of the abandoned mines and associated facilities in 1986. This established the size and scope of the liability and formed the framework for a possible future remediation project. The initial program for the reduction of physical and radiological hazards at each of the identified sites was formulated in 1989 and the works took place from 1990 to 1992. But even at this time, as throughout much of the valley’s history, little attention was being paid to the long term aspirations of traditional land owners. The traditional Aboriginal owners, the Gunlom Land Trust, were granted freehold Native Title to the area in 1996. They immediately leased the land back to the Commonwealth Government so it would remain a part of Kakadu National Park, but under joint management. One condition of the lease required that all evidence of former mining activity be remediated by 2015. The consultation, and subsequent planning processes, for a final remediation program began in 1997. A plan was agreed in 2003 and, after funding was granted in 2005, works implementation commenced in 2007. An earlier paper described the planning and consultation stages, experience involving the cleaning up of remant uranium mill tailings and other mining residues; and the successful implementation of the initial remediation works. This paper deals with the final planning and design processes to complete the remediation programme, which is due to occur in 2009. The issues of final containment design and long term stewardship are addressed in the paper as well as some comments on lessons learned through the life of the project.
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Hollingsworth, Ian, James Croton, Inakwu Odeh, E. Buli, and D. Klessa. "Landscape Reconstruction Using Analogues at Ranger Mine, Northern Territory, Australia." In First International Seminar on Mine Closure. Australian Centre for Geomechanics, Perth, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.36487/acg_repo/605_7.

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Grant, Ray, and Dehne McLaughin. "Azurite suns from the Malbunka copper mine, Northern Territory, Australia." In 33rd Annual New Mexico Mineral Symposium and 4th Annual Mining Artifact Collectors Association Symposium. Socorro, NM: New Mexico Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.58799/nmms-2012.456.

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Schlotgauer, S. D. "ENVIRONMENT PROTECTION FUNCTIONS OF THE TUGURSKY NATURE RESERVE (KHABAROVSK TERRITORY)." In Современные проблемы регионального развития. ИКАРП ДВО РАН, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.31433/978-5-904121-41-9-2024-101-103.

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The study revealed that the category of the Tugursky state natural reserve in its hydrothermal indicators is similar to the northern taiga zonal areas of the northern Amur region, as it is characterized by low intensity of self-regulation of soil and vegetation cover. At the same time, it differs from the northern taiga ecosystems of Priohotye in a different thermal regime, which, combined with high humidity, ensures good development of larch and spruce forests in the Tugur River valley and on the slopes of the Mevandzha and Tugursky ridge mountain systems. They occupy moist and well-drained areas of the floodplain and above-floodplain terraces and waterlogged areas with difficult drainage of interfluves. Derivative forests, open forests and shrub formations of pyrogenic origin occupy most of the reserve. These formations of birch forests and shrub bogs play an invaluable role in maintaining the ecological balance of the territory, serving as biotopes for animals.
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Spain, Alister, Randal Hinz, John Ludwig, Mark Tibbett, and David Tongway. "Mine Closure and Ecosystem Development ⎯ Alcan Gove Bauxite Mine, Northern Territory, Australia." In First International Seminar on Mine Closure. Australian Centre for Geomechanics, Perth, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.36487/acg_repo/605_23.

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Reports on the topic "Northern Territory"

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Head, Brian, and Linda Colley. Senior Executive Case Study - Northern Territory. Australia and New Zealand School of Government, January 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.54810/wjdb1277.

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This paper is one of a series of eight which summarise how senior executive arrangements in Australia’s public services have evolved since the 1980s. They look at the legislative and policy changes over that period and provide a snapshot of arrangements for senior public servants through to 2021.
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Park, J. K. Paleomagnetism of the Old Crow Batholith, northern Yukon Territory. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/131399.

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Utting, J. Thermal Maturity of Lower Carboniferous Rocks in northern Yukon Territory. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/127580.

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Tan, K. P., E. E. Slatter, S. D. Hostetler, and J. Vizy. Exploring for the Future—Alice Springs hydrogeology synthesis report, Northern Territory. Geoscience Australia, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.11636/record.2021.007.

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Dixon, J., M. J. Orchard, and E. H. Davies. Carnian and Norian (Triassic) strata in the British Mountains, northern Yukon Territory. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/207427.

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Utting, J. Lower carboniferous miospore assemblages from the Hart River formation, northern Yukon Territory. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/132680.

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Morrow, D. W. Lower Paleozoic stratigraphy of northern Yukon Territory and northwestern District of Mackenzie. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/210998.

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Trihey, J. M., E. S. B. McGrath-Cohen, and A. M. Haiblen. Exploring for the Future—Hydrochemistry Data Release, Daly River project, Northern Territory. Geoscience Australia, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.11636/record.2020.046.

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Stewart, A. J. Notes on North Australia Craton solid geology maps: Northern Territory-Queensland, 2015-20. Geoscience Australia, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.11636/record.2020.012.

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McPherson, A. A., R. S. Brodie, S. D. Hostetler, R. H. Parige, N. J. Symington, A. Ray, and V. Halas. Exploring for the Future—hydrogeological investigations in the Tennant Creek region, Northern Territory. Geoscience Australia, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.11636/record.2020.033.

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