Tesi sul tema "East Indian Australians"
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Murugaian, M. "A study of cultural assimilation and cultural maintenance among tertiary students of Indian origin in South Australia /". Title page, summary and table of contents only, 1988. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09EDM/09edmm984.pdf.
Testo completoVoigt-Graf, Carmen 1970. "The construction of transnational spaces : travelling between India, Fiji and Australia / Carmen Voigt-Graf". Thesis, The University of Sydney, 2002. https://hdl.handle.net/2123/27931.
Testo completoVan, Duivenvoorde Wendy. "The Batavia shipwreck". [College Station, Tex. : Texas A&M University, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2872.
Testo completoAthique, Adrian Mabbott. "Non-resident cinema transnational audiences for Indian films /". Access electronically, 2005. http://www.library.uow.edu.au/adt-NWU/public/adt-NWU20060511.140513/index.html.
Testo completoRozeboom, Judith. "Merdeka Down Under? Indonesian Civilians and Military Personnel in Australia (1942–1949)". Thesis, The University of Sydney, 2022. https://hdl.handle.net/2123/29853.
Testo completoNelson, Jeffrey C. "ABDACOM: America’s first coalition experience in World War II". Thesis, Kansas State University, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/2097/13618.
Testo completoDepartment of History
David A. Graff
On December 7, 1941 the Japanese Empire launched a surprise attack on the United States at the Pearl Harbor naval base in the territory of Hawaii. The following day President Franklin D. Roosevelt declared war on Japan, and America was suddenly an active participant in a global war that had already been underway for over five years. World War II pitted the Axis (Japan, Germany, and Italy) against a coalition of allied nations that were united primarily by fear of Axis totalitarianism. Typically referred to as the Allies, the alliance’s most powerful participants included the United States, the Soviet Union, and Great Britain. However, many other nations were involved on the Allied side. Smaller European countries such as Holland, Belgium, and Poland fought with armed forces and governments in exile located in London after their homelands had been overrun by the Germans in 1939 and 1940. China had been at war with Japan since 1937. After the United States entered the war, allied action resulted in the creation of different, localized military coalitions between 1941 and 1945. These coalitions presented Allied leaders with unique problems created by the political, geographic, military and logistical issues of fighting war on a global scale. The earliest coalition in which the United States was involved was known by the acronym ABDACOM, short for the American, British, Dutch, Australian Command. ABDACOM’s mission was the defense of the Malay Barrier, which stretched from the Malay Peninsula through the Dutch East Indies to New Guinea, and the protection of the Southwest Pacific Area from Japanese invasion. In its brief two-month existence the ADBA coalition in the Southwest Pacific Area failed to prevent the Japanese from taking the Malay Barrier, Singapore, Burma and the islands between Java and the Philippines. This was due not to one overriding problem, but to a combination of planning, command, and logistical problems, compounded by the distance of Allied production and training centers from the front lines. These problems can be traced from the late 1930s to the dissolution of ABDACOM at the end of February 1942. Historians have often overlooked the underlying causes of the United States’ first foray into coalition warfare in World War II. To better understand why the Allied forces succumbed to the Japanese onslaught so quickly, one must look at political, military and economic relations between the United States and its allies prior to the onset of hostilities in 1941. Domestic political realities combined with international diplomatic differences kept the United States from openly preparing for coalition action until the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. The ensuing military coalition suffered from numerous deficiencies in command structure and logistics. Though pre-war planning existed within each of the Allied governments, the lack of cooperative action gave the Japanese military an insurmountable military advantage over the members of the ABDA coalition. Given the limited scope of this paper the focus will be on American participation in ABDACOM. The other countries involved will be included insomuch as they help to fill out the story of the United States and its first coalition effort in World War II. The story of the ABDACOM coalition is one of perseverance, creative planning, and deep stoicism in the face of overwhelming odds. The short life of the coalition gave planners in Washington, D.C. and London time to sort out potential conflicts between the Allies.
Banks, Aaron M. "The seasonal movements and dynamics of migrating humpback whales off the east coast of Africa". Thesis, University of St Andrews, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10023/4109.
Testo completoROY, HAIMANTI. "CITIZENSHIP AND NATIONAL IDENTITY IN POST PARTITION BENGAL, 1947-65". University of Cincinnati / OhioLINK, 2006. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ucin1147886544.
Testo completoHelson, Peter History Australian Defence Force Academy UNSW. "The forgotten Air Force : the establishment and employment of Australian air power in the North-Western area, 1941-1945". Awarded by:University of New South Wales - Australian Defence Force Academy. School of History, 1997. http://handle.unsw.edu.au/1959.4/38719.
Testo completoGowan, Sunaina. "The shifting identity of the professional workforce in Australian organisations : the Indian immigrant experience". Thesis, 2014. http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/uws:31406.
Testo completoTwomey, Callum. "Historical variability of east coast lows (ECLs) and their impact on Eastern Australia’s hydroclimate". Thesis, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1356112.
Testo completoThe hydroclimate of eastern Australia is highly variable, with a multitude of large-scale climate processes bearing considerable influence on spatial and temporal rainfall characteristics. One phenomenon known for its contribution to rainfall and which operates on daily timescales, are East Coast Lows (ECLs). These intense low-pressure systems which take place over the subtropical east coasts of southern and northern hemisphere continents are typically associated with gale force winds, large seas, storm surges, heavy rainfall and flooding. While ECL impacts are usually seen as negative (e.g. flooding, storm damage etc.), the rainfall associated with ECLs is also very important for urban water security within the heavily populated eastern seaboard of Australia (ESA). This region of Australia contains a high number of city centres which are forecast to undergo disproportionate rates of growth compared to other areas in Australia. As a result, considerable pressure will be placed on water infrastructure and its resilience to climate variability. This thesis investigates the historical variability of ECLs, and their impact on eastern Australia’s hydroclimate, with particular emphasis placed on the ESA. Within the last decade, several comprehensive ECL databases have been developed. Despite this, inconsistencies remain as to what constitutes an ECL. This has hindered our ability to understand these systems and their impacts. In this thesis, we demonstrate that the definition of an ECL should include classification of the various ECL sub-types based on the synoptic-scale environments from which they form. ECL sub-types have different spatial distributions, seasonal cycles, and rainfall characteristics. Consequently, regions of eastern Australia and in particular the ESA, are influenced differently by different ECL sub-types. An investigation of rainfall across Australia and within the ESA suggests that the ESA is different to the rest of Australia and also not homogenous itself. For winter three separate divisions are identified: (i) the most northerly division from Moreton in Queensland (QLD) to the Manning region of New South Wales (NSW); (ii) the Hunter region south to the metropolitan Sydney area; and (iii) from Illawarra (NSW) to Eastern-central Victoria. For summer, autumn, and spring rainfall, two clear divisions are present: (i) the two most northerly divisions identified in winter combined and (ii) and the equivalent of the third and most southerly outlined for winter. The results suggest that the observed spatial inhomogeneity in rainfall across the ESA is at least in part due to ECLs and their sub-types. Though ECLs may only last a few days, they do have the capacity to provide considerable contributions to water storage reservoirs. Approximately one-third of ECL related rainfall occurs in the 48-hours prior to the system entering the Tasman Sea. Furthermore, given the trajectory of sub-types such as Inland Troughs (IT), Continental Lows (CL) and Southern Secondary Lows(SSL), much of this rainfall provides relief to western flowing headwaters, inland of the Great Dividing Range (GDR). An examination of seasonal rainfall contributions reveals that rainfall associated with Easterly Trough Low (ETL) is statistically significant along the central and northern latitudes of the ESA within winter. SSLs are also found to be significant for the southern extent of the ESA and extends its influence into spring, while CLs establish significance across Victoria. On daily time-scales ITs and ex-tropical cyclones are found to have significantly higher rainfall totals than non-ECL sources (and a number of other ECL sub-types) for their regions of preference. However, due to their infrequent nature, this did not translate into significant seasonal contributions, signifying an important difference in what sub-types present a risk to flooding and those, or rather their absence, that present a risk to water security. ECL sub-types and how their variability impact eastern Australia’s hydroclimate is also shown to be affected by large-scale climate processes. Changes in the spatial distribution of ECLs is found to reflect changes in the proportion of ECL sub-types. When in the La Niña phase, the El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) (and its variant ENSO Modoki) tend to shift the spatial distribution of ECLs north. In winter, this also corresponds to an increase in overall ECL activity. This results in more than a 50% increase in ECL related winter rainfall, while similar magnitude of decrease was observed during the El Niño phase. Other mechanisms such as the Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) were also found to have a considerable influence on the spatial distribution of ECLs and their associated rainfall. During negative IOD conditions, increases in rainfall west of the GDR corresponded to an increase in the proportion of westerly ECLs. Conversely, during positive IOD, ECL rainfall increases within the ESA owing to a change in the proportion of ECL sub-types. This thesis also provides insights into the importance of ECLs and their sub-types to a key streamflow monitoring station within the Hunter region of NSW. As an indicator for inflowpotential to the Grahamstown Dam, ECLs are responsible for 74% of all streamflow ≥ 99th percentile within the Williams River catchment. Likewise, the absence of ECLs is also shown to be associated with times where the Williams River is experiencing its lowest flow rates. The findings of this thesis are significant and demonstrate the influence ECL sub-types have on hydroclimatic variability in eastern Australia. It also reveals that existing climate related risks are different across the ESA and suggests that how those risks change into the future is also likely to be inconsistent across the ESA – and will likely depend heavily on what eventuates in terms of changes to ECL, and the various ECL sub-types and behaviour (e.g. frequency, timing, location, duration, magnitude and sequencing). This reinforces the need for locally relevant and practically useful climate science information and adaptation strategies - as opposed to State- or Countrywide information and adaptation approaches that are commonly used.
Islam, Waliul. "Ways of becoming : South Asian students in an Australian postgraduate environment". Thesis, 2009. https://vuir.vu.edu.au/15244/.
Testo completoLi, Tien-Chang, e 李典璋. "The Accrual Anomaly: The Case of Taiwan, New Zealand, Australia, India and Major South-East Asian Countries". Thesis, 2008. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/07443830929179495121.
Testo completo國立成功大學
會計學系碩博士班
96
This paper considers stock markets in 10 South-East Asian countries to investigate whether the accrual anomaly (Sloan 1996), characterized by U.S. stock prices overweighting the role of accrual persistence, is a local manifestation of a global phenomenon. This paper explores whether the occurrence of the anomaly is related to cross-country differences in accounting and institutional structures, and examines alternative explanations for its occurrence. Generally, in the selected South-East Asian countries, this paper does not find stock prices overweight accruals but underweight accruals, and no evidence showing that accruals overweighting will occur in countries with a common law relative to a code law tradition. Using firm-level data on a country-by-country basis, this paper documents the occurrence of the anomaly in there countries, India, Thailand, and Indonesia. Using country-level data, this paper confirms that the anomaly of accruals is more likely to occur in countries providing lower shareholder protections and in countries with less important equity market. Additional analyses reveal that occurrence of accrual anomaly is mainly due to earnings management, and after controlling barriers to arbitrage, accrual anomaly is not fully arbitraged away in South-East Asian countries.
Prasad, Mohit Manoj, University of Western Sydney, of Arts Education and Social Sciences College e School of Humanities. "Indo-Fijian diasporic bodies : narratives in text, image, popular culture, and the lived everyday in Fiji and Liverpool, Sydney, Australia". 2005. http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/15318.
Testo completoDoctor of Philosophy (PhD)
Prasad, Mohit Manoj. "Indo-Fijian diasporic bodies : narratives in text, image, popular culture, and the lived everyday in Fiji and Liverpool, Sydney, Australia". Thesis, 2005. http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/15318.
Testo completoWaniganayake, Manjula Subodhini. "Ethnic identification during early childhood : the role of parents and teachers". Phd thesis, 1992. http://hdl.handle.net/1885/123807.
Testo completo