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1

McKay, Jennifer. "Water institutional reforms in Australia". Water Policy 7, n. 1 (1 febbraio 2005): 35–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.2166/wp.2005.0003.

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Abstract (sommario):
With a brief description of the physical setting and institutional history of the Australian water sector, this paper reviews the water institutional reforms in Australia focusing especially on the nature and extent of reforms initiated since 1995 and provides a few case studies to highlight the issues and challenges in effecting changes in some key reform components. The reforms initiated in 1995 are notable for their comprehensiveness, fiscal incentives and clear and time-bound targets to be achieved. Although water institutions in Australia have undergone remarkable changes, thanks to the reforms, there are still issues and challenges inherent in reforming maturing water institutions. Regional diversity in legal systems and quality standards as well as conflicts between private interest and public welfare are still serious to constraining market-based water allocation and management. While Australia still needs further reforms, its recent reform experience provides considerable insights into the understanding of both the theory and the practice of water institutional reforms.
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2

Jenkins, John. "The Dynamics of Regional Tourism Organisations in New South Wales, Australia: History, Structures and Operations". Current Issues in Tourism 3, n. 3 (dicembre 2000): 175–203. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13683500008667872.

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3

Hedgcock, Dave, e Andrea Marçel Pidalà. "Education, practice and professionalism: a comparative history of the development of urban and regional planning in Italy and Australia". Planning Perspectives 29, n. 4 (7 agosto 2014): 527–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02665433.2014.938100.

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4

Mei, Ding. "From Xinjiang to Australia". Inner Asia 17, n. 2 (9 dicembre 2015): 243–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22105018-12340044.

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Russians have lived in Xinjiang since the nineteenth century and those who accepted Chinese citizenship were recognised as one of China’s ethnic minorities known asguihua zu(naturalised and assimilated people). In theminzuidentification programme (1950s–1980s), the nameeluosi zureplacedguihua zuand became Russians’ official identification in China. Russians (including both Soviet and Chinese citizens) used to constitute a significant population in Manchuria, Inner Mongolia, Xinjiang and several other regions in China before the 1960s. According to the 2000 census,eluosi zuhad a population of only 15,609 and more than half of these lived in Xinjiang. Based on anthropological fieldwork in China and Australia, this article investigates the formation of theeluosi zuand the changing concept of ‘the Russian’ in Xinjiang, with the emphasis on the socialist period after 1949. The emigration to Australia from the 1960s to 1980s initially strengthened the European identity of this Russian minority. With the abolition of the ‘white Australia’ policy in 1973 and China’s growing importance to Australia, this Russian minority group’s identification with Xinjiang and China has been revived. Studying Russians from Xinjiang also provides an insight into the Uyghur diaspora in Australia, since their emigration history and shared regional identity are intertwined.
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5

Plummer, Paul, e Matthew Tonts. "Do History and Geography Matter? Regional Unemployment Dynamics in a Resource-Dependent Economy: Evidence from Western Australia, 1984–2011". Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space 45, n. 12 (dicembre 2013): 2919–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1068/a45417.

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6

O'BRIEN, CAROLYN. "Oceans Divide, Oceans Unite: The Concept of Regional Security in Australian Defence Planning". Australian Journal of Politics & History 25, n. 2 (7 aprile 2008): 201–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8497.1979.tb00281.x.

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7

Auster, Martin. "Origins of the Australian regional and metropolitan planning movement, 1900–1940". Journal of Australian Studies 11, n. 21 (novembre 1987): 29–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14443058709386956.

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8

Sim, Jean. "Queen's Parks in Queensland". Queensland Review 19, n. 1 (giugno 2012): 15–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/qre.2012.3.

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Queen's Park in Maryborough is one of many public gardens established in the nineteenth century in Queensland: in Brisbane, Ipswich, Toowoomba, Warwick, Rockhampton, Mackay, Townsville, Cairns and Cooktown. They were created primarily as places of horticultural experimentation, as well as for recreational purposes. They formed a local area network, with the Brisbane Botanic Garden and the Government Botanist, Walter Hill, at the centre – at least in the 1870s. From here, the links extended to other botanic gardens in Australia, and beyond Australia to the British colonial network managed through the Royal Botanic Gardens (RBG), Kew. It was an informal network, supplying a knowledge of basic economic botany that founded many tropical agricultural industries and also provided much-needed recreational, educational and inspirational opportunities for colonial newcomers and residents. The story of these parks, from the time when they were first set aside as public reserves by the government surveyors to the present day, is central to the history of urban planning in regional centres. This article provides a statewide overview together with a more in-depth examination of Maryborough's own historic Queen's Park.
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9

Barber, Marcus. "Settling for dams?: planning for sustainable Indigenous livelihoods within large-scale irrigated agricultural development in north Queensland, Australia". Rangeland Journal 40, n. 4 (2018): 365. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/rj18014.

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Large-scale irrigated production of food, fuel and fibre has received new impetus from rising population and consumption levels and from structural changes in agribusiness, notably financialisation and vertical and horizontal consolidation. In Australia, these trends have provided new justifications for pre-existing economic and nationalist aspirations for water and irrigated agricultural development in the pastoral-dominated tropical north. Indigenous Australians have the longest history of past attachment to northern land and waterscapes, the highest degree of current socioeconomic marginalisation, and the strongest focus on the intergenerational equity and sustainability of development. This qualitative study undertaken with senior Indigenous custodians in two North Queensland catchments identified that major irrigation development posed significant risks, but may also contribute to diversified local Indigenous livelihoods. In particular, well structured development may enable the employment-related resettlement of depopulated traditional lands in the upper catchments, inverting the more commonly reported relationship between dam development and local residence. Yet the catchment-scale impacts from such development means that any complementarity between local Indigenous and developer aspirations in the immediate development zone does not necessarily entail complementarity with downstream Indigenous livelihood needs and aspirations. Regional coordination of Indigenous livelihood plans is required to establish effective baselines for negotiating sustainable development outcomes.
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10

Das, Shubhamitra. "Middle Power Cooperation in the Indo-Pacific: India and Australia at the Forefront". International Studies 58, n. 4 (ottobre 2021): 513–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/00208817211056742.

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Indo-Pacific has emerged as a region of great movement, conflict and cooperation, contestations and coalition-building. The emergence of minilateral and multilateral cooperation by the middle powers is increasing in the region, with the regional countries enthusiastically mapping the region focussing on their centrality. History proves that the role of middle-power countries became more prominent during the moments of international transition. The two contrasting powers like India and Australia; one with a post-colonial identity in foreign policy-making, subtle emphasis on non-aligned movement (NAM) and emerging as an influential power, and, on the other, a traditional middle power with an alliance structure and regionalism akin to the Western model, have equal stakes in the region and it is inevitable for them to take a leadership position in building what is called a middle power communion in the Indo-Pacific. This article will explore the understanding of middle powers and how India and Australia, as middle powers; are strategically placed and, being great powers within their respective regions; take the responsibility of region-building and maintaining peace with great powers, and how the Indo-Pacific and Quad are emerging as discourses within their foreign policy-making.
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11

Williams, N., e R. Johnston. "'not Passing Through': Aboriginal Stakeholders in the Rangelands." Rangeland Journal 16, n. 2 (1994): 198. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/rj9940198.

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Comparison of Aboriginal interests in rangelands in western New South Wales with those in north- western Northern Temtory and the Kimberley of Western Australia reveals little difference in their history, aspirations for land acquisition, or plans for multiple use management. Throughout Australia, Aboriginal people who are traditional owners of rangelands continue to live on or near the land they regard as traditionally theirs. This is true of the more closely settled rangelands as well as remote regions. In all the rangeland areas Aboriginal people now wish (and following the Mabo decision may more realistically expect to gain) some form of freehold title to at least some of their land. Aboriginal people whose traditional lands are located in western New South Wales have access to very little of their land but have maintained their connection to it. They have aspirations of obtaining access to and control over portions of it, with plans to manage it under a multiple use regime that would include small-scale sustainable pastoralism and agriculture, while living in dispersed family groups on the land. Aboriginal people's desire to retain access to their traditional land for non-economic reasons (spiritual, social, historical) is paramount. Should the Commonwealth Land Fund legislation be enacted, cultural imperatives as well as economic viability will need to be taken into account in the purchase of land. Planning for future management should incorporate traditional ecological knowledge and should involve Aboriginal traditional owners and their organisations, such as land councils and resource agencies, in local and regional planning.
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12

Wade, Geoff. "The beginnings of a ‘Cold War’ in Southeast Asia: British and Australian perceptions". Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 40, n. 3 (1 settembre 2009): 543–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022463409990063.

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The questions of how and when the Cold War manifested itself in Southeast Asia are here examined through the perceptions of Britain and Australia to regional and global events from 1945 to 1950. Both had major stakes in the eventual results of the local contentions in Southeast Asia, as well as in the global effects of great power rivalry. Yet even for these powers, determining when they believed the Cold War came to Southeast Asia is dependent on the definition adopted. By 1946, there was already recognition of entrenched ideological conflict in Southeast Asia, and that this threatened Western interests. In 1947, there was recognition of connections between the local communist parties and the ‘global designs’ of the Soviet Union. In 1948, there was the outbreak of armed violence in Burma, Malaya and Indonesia, though there was no evidence of direct Soviet involvement in these. Ultimately, however, it was the establishment of the PRC in 1949 (as a major regional communist power), in tandem with plans by non-communist states to coordinate policy against communism, which was seen as marking the arrival of fully-fledged Cold War in Southeast Asia.
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13

Walker, Glen R., Avril C. Horne, Quan J. Wang e Rob Rendell. "Assessing the Impact of Irrigation Efficiency Projects on Return Flows in the South-Eastern Murray–Darling Basin, Australia". Water 13, n. 10 (14 maggio 2021): 1366. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/w13101366.

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Improving irrigation efficiency (IE) is an approach used globally to help meet competing demands for water and facilitate reallocation of water between sectors. In the Murray–Darling Basin in Australia, the Australian government has invested heavily in IE projects to recover water for the environment. However, this approach has been seriously questioned, out of concerns that improved IE would reduce irrigation return flows to rivers and therefore offset water recovery. In this study, we use a water balance model to assess the impact of the IE projects on return flows and highlight sensitivities and uncertainties. The model enables the impact on return flows to be assessed on specific IE projects and regional characteristics. Overall, reductions in return flows are estimated to be less than 20% of the total proposed IE savings. The history of IE in the southern MDB has meant that most of the current reductions are in ground return flows. Our estimate is much lower than two previous studies, mainly due to different assumptions being used on groundwater connectivity between irrigation areas and major streams. While the IE projects significantly reduce seepage to groundwater (with off-farm and on-farm projects reducing seepage by 19% and 53% of total savings respectively), not all seepage reductions will translate to a reduction in ground return flows to rivers. A lower estimate is consistent with existing monitoring and groundwater modeling studies. In this paper, the study results are discussed in a broader context of impacts of IE projects on volumes and salinity of streams and groundwater resources.
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14

Vázquez Vicente, Guillermo, Victor Martín Barroso e Francisco José Blanco Jiménez. "Sustainable Tourism, Economic Growth and Employment—The Case of the Wine Routes of Spain". Sustainability 13, n. 13 (25 giugno 2021): 7164. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su13137164.

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Tourism has become a priority in national and regional development policies and is considered a source of economic growth, particularly in rural areas. Nowadays, wine tourism is an important form of tourism and has become a local development tool for rural areas. Regional tourism development studies based on wine tourism have a long history in several countries such as the US and Australia, but are more recent in Europe. Although Spain is a leading country in the tourism industry, with an enormous wine-growing tradition, the literature examining the economic impact of wine tourism in Spanish economy is scarce. In an attempt to fill this gap, the main objective of this paper is to analyze the impact of wine tourism on economic growth and employment in Spain. More specifically, by applying panel data techniques, we study the economic impact of tourism in nine Spanish wine routes in the period from 2008 to 2018. Our results suggest that tourism in these wine routes had a positive effect on economic growth. However, we do not find clear evidence of a positive effect on employment generation.
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15

Juewei Shi e Sioh Yang Tan. "Flows of Innovation in Fo Guang Shan Oceania: Transregional dynamics behind the Buddha’s Birthday Festival". Journal of Global Buddhism 23, n. 2 (8 dicembre 2022): 185–202. http://dx.doi.org/10.26034/lu.jgb.2022.1998.

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Fo Guang Shan (FGS), a transnational Buddhist movement in the Chinese Mahāyāna tradition, has grown rapidly in the last fifty years to become a global network of close to 180 branch temples. For almost thirty years, FGS Oceania has invested heavily in the Buddha’s Birthday Festival annually in the form of weekend-long festivals in public spaces across Australia and New Zealand, involving months of planning and thousands of volunteers to welcome tens of thousands of visitors. FGS Oceania served as an incubator, exporter, and importer of innovations to make the Buddha, Dharma, and Sangha accessible to the public through these festivals. Here, we map the flows of such innovations among the headquarters in Taiwan, the Oceanic branches, and other regional headquarters to examine the dynamics of organisational learning that drive these innovations. Using a system of systems model, we argue that such flows were enabled by FGS’ culture of innovation and the independent yet collaborative nature of its transregional network.
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16

Loughnan, Claire. "Regional deterrence and ‘non-genuine’ refugees: The punitive legacy of the 1989 Comprehensive Plan of Action". Asian and Pacific Migration Journal 28, n. 2 (19 aprile 2019): 155–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0117196819842972.

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The outsourcing of refugee protection obligations is reshaping state relations in the Asia Pacific and Southeast Asian region and has underscored a progressively punitive approach to ‘irregular’ refugee movement. Such a shift can be partially but importantly traced to the deterrent foundations of Australia's dual-track processing system, introduced as an outcome of the 1989 Comprehensive Plan of Action on Indochinese Refugees (CPA). Although the CPA was a multilateral attempt to improve access to refugee protection through a coordinated regional response, in many respects it undermined the potential for refugee protection. By examining the history and motivations of regional responses, we can trace their impact as an exercise in either affirming or disavowing regional responsibility for refugee protection, while enabling some states to retain and even increase their capacity for control in the region. Given the call by the Global Compact on Refugees for coordinated regionally responsive approaches based on humanitarian principles, the crafting of regional and global plans, their motives and their governing logic, require ongoing and careful attention to ascertain the forms of responsibility or irresponsibility for refugee protection which they might sustain over time.
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17

H. Kelly, Andrew. "Amenity enhancement and biodiversity conservation in Australian suburbia". International Journal of Law in the Built Environment 6, n. 1/2 (8 aprile 2014): 91–105. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ijlbe-05-2013-0022.

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Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to critically explore the historical background and current approach of the most common statutory instrument to maintain green landscapes in private residential gardens in cities and townships in suburban New South Wales (NSW), Australia. Design/methodology/approach – The narrative presents a transdisciplinary study. While its emphasis is on law and town planning, it also encompasses local government and legal history while touching upon environmental management and ecological science. This panoply of areas reflects the sheer complexity of the topic. While the presentation is initially descriptive, it moves on to a critique of the NSW Government's recent statutory approach. Findings – The paper demands that further attention must be paid to improving the design and architecture of statutory plans and underlying policies to not only improve urban biodiversity but also retain, as far as practicable, the visual beauty of the suburban landscape. This means reliance on local government to devise their own acceptable approaches. Flexibility rather than rigidity is warranted. Originality/value – The amount of scholarly material on this topic is relatively rare. The majority of information relies on excellent on-ground research and experience on the part of local experts, namely council employees and consultants. Academic and practical material must be drawn together to improve biodiversity conservation at both the local and regional spheres.
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18

Goff, James, e Catherine Chagué-Goff. "The Australian tsunami database". Progress in Physical Geography: Earth and Environment 38, n. 2 (aprile 2014): 218–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0309133314522282.

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There has been a significant increase in the number of peer-reviewed publications, critical reviews and searchable web-based databases, since the first substantial tsunami database for Australia was published in 2007. This review represents a complete reorganization and restructuring of previous work coupled with the addition of new data that takes the number of events from 57 (including 2 erroneous events) to 145. Several significant errors have been corrected including mistaken run-up heights for the event of 19 August 1977, Sumba Island, Indonesia, that suggested it was the largest tsunami in Australia’s history. The largest historical event in the database is now the 17 July 2006, Java, Indonesia, tsunami that had a run-up height of 7.90 m at Steep Point, Western Australia. Although estimated wave heights of 40 ft (∼13 m) were noted for the 8 April 1911 event at Warrnambool, Victoria, no run-up data were provided. One of the more interesting findings has been the occurrence of at least 11 deaths, albeit for events that are generally poorly defined. Data gathered during the construction of this database were rigorously reviewed and as such several previous palaeotsunami entries have been removed and other potentially new ones discarded. The reasons for inclusion or exclusion of data are discussed, and it is acknowledged that while there has been an almost three-fold increase in the number of entries the database is still incomplete. With this in mind the database architecture has been brought in line with others in the region with the ultimate goal of merging them all in order to provide a larger, interrogatable and updatable data set. In essence, the goal is to enhance our understanding of the national and regional tsunami hazard (and risk) and to move towards an open-source database.
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19

Connell-Variy, Theodore, Björn Berggren e Tony McGough. "Housing Markets and Resource Sector Fluctuations: A Cross-Border Comparative Analysis". Sustainability 13, n. 16 (9 agosto 2021): 8918. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su13168918.

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Recent research has sought to better understand resource and housing market cycles longitudinally and define clear phases in order to understand interactions between the two over time. This is a necessary step forward in housing market knowledge for this under researched area, particularly in an economically unique context. This paper expands knowledge by undertaking a comparative study of town housing markets in Queensland’s coal mining Bowen Basin and Sweden’s northern municipalities—specifically Gallivare and Kiruna—where a long history of iron ore mining exists. This paper analyses these housing markets using longitudinal data spanning two decades, which includes two resources cycles in two geographically disparate locations. The results indicate that the housing market in Queensland, Australia, is far more volatile than the housing market in the Swedish municipalities. The regional housing market in Sweden’s municipalities tend to be less dependent on resource price and output from mines than their Australian counterparts. Part of the explanation for this is that the Swedish towns examined are less of the traditional mining town known from previous studies, and more a town with mining. Developing and improving understanding of markets over the duration of a cycle is important. Particular value is apparent in the comparison and contrasting of two separate resource regions encompassing resource reliant communities in two different countries. Importantly, the linkage of research regions through resource relationships leads to groundbreaking research which will have practical benefit to multiple economies, housing markets and for policy-makers alike.
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Podger, Andrew. "Federalism and Australia’s National Health and Health Insurance System". Asia Pacific Journal of Health Management 11, n. 3 (1 ottobre 2016): 26–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.24083/apjhm.v11i3.151.

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While health reform in Australia has been marked by piecemeal, incremental changes, the overall trend to increasing Commonwealth involvement has not been accidental or driven by power-hungry centralists: it has been shaped by broader national and international developments including technological change and the maturing of our nation and its place internationally, and by a widespread desire for a national universal health insurance system. In many respects the Australianhealth system performs well, but the emerging challenges demand a more integrated, patient-oriented system. This is likely to require a further shift towards the Commonwealth in terms of financial responsibility, as the national insurer. But it also requires close cooperation with the States, who could play a firmer role in service delivery and in supporting regional planning and coordination. The likelihood of sharing overall responsibility for the health system also suggests thereis a need to involve the States more fully in processes for setting national policies. This article draws heavily on a lecture presented at the Australian National University in October 2015. It includes an overview of Australia’s evolving federal arrangements and the context within which the current Federalism Review is being conducted. It suggests Australia will not return to ‘coordinate federalism’ with clearly distinct responsibilities, and that greater priority should be given to improving how we manage shared responsibilities. There is a long history of Commonwealth involvement in health, and future reform should build on that rather than try to reverse direction. While critical of the proposals from the Commission of Audit and in the 2014 Budget, the lecture welcomed the more pragmatic approaches that seemed to be emerging from the Federalism Review discussion papers and contributions from some Premiers which could promote more sensible measures to improve both the effectiveness and the financial sustainability of Australia’s health and health insurance system. The Commonwealth’s new political leadership in 2015 seemed interested in such measures and in moving away from the Abbott Government’s approach. But the legacy of that approach severely damaged the Turnbull Government in the 2016 federal election as it gave traction to Labor’s ‘Mediscare’ campaign. In addition to resetting the federalism debate as it affects health, the Turnbull Government now needs to articulate the principles of Medicare and to clarify the role of the private sector, including private health insurance, in Australia’s universal health insurance system. Labor also needs to address more honestly the role of the private sector and develop a more coherent policy itself. Abbreviations: COAG – Council of Australian Governments; NHHRC – National Health and Hospitals Reform Commission; PHI – Private Health Insurance; VFI – Vertical Fiscal Imbalance.
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Nilson, Caroline, Karrie-Anne Kearing-Salmon, Paul Morrison e Catherine Fetherston. "An ethnographic action research study to investigate the experiences of Bindjareb women participating in the cooking and nutrition component of an Aboriginal health promotion programme in regional Western Australia". Public Health Nutrition 18, n. 18 (22 aprile 2015): 3394–405. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1368980015000816.

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AbstractObjectiveTo investigate the experiences of women participating in a cooking and nutrition component of a health promotion research initiative in an Australian Aboriginal regional community.DesignWeekly facilitated cooking and nutrition classes were conducted during school terms over 12 months. An ethnographic action research study was conducted for the programme duration with data gathered by participant and direct observation, four yarning groups and six individual yarning sessions. The aim was to determine the ways the cooking and nutrition component facilitated lifestyle change, enabled engagement, encouraged community ownership and influenced community action.SettingRegional Bindjareb community in the Nyungar nation of Western Australia.SubjectsA sample of seventeen Aboriginal women aged between 18 and 60 years from the two kinships in two towns in one shire took part in the study. The recruitment and consent process was managed by community Elders and leaders.ResultsMajor themes emerged highlighting the development of participants and their recognition of the need for change: the impact of history on current nutritional health of Indigenous Australians; acknowledging shame; challenges of change around nutrition and healthy eating; the undermining effect of mistrust and limited resources; the importance of community control when developing health promotion programmes; finding life purpose through learning; and the need for planning and partnerships to achieve community determination.ConclusionsSuggested principles for developing cooking and nutrition interventions are: consideration of community needs; understanding the impact of historical factors on health; understanding family and community tensions; and the engagement of long-term partnerships to develop community determination.
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Morton, Micah F., e Ian G. Baird. "From Hill tribes to Indigenous Peoples: The localisation of a global movement in Thailand". Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 50, n. 1 (febbraio 2019): 7–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022463419000031.

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This article presents a chronology of the growth of the concept of Indigeneity in Thailand, analysing the particular ways in which the global Indigenous movement has taken root in the country. In Thailand, transnational support networks and the opening of political associational space played key roles in facilitating the growth of, first, a regional, and later a national Indigenous movement during the 1980s and early 2000s, respectively. Indigenous Peoples in Thailand are asserting their identity by drawing on a new concept of Indigeneity being promoted by the United Nations and other international advocacy organisations that identifies them not only as first peoples, but crucially as colonised or oppressed peoples. Indigenous Peoples in Thailand are further asserting both their cultural distinctiveness and their compatibility with the Thai nation. The Indigenous movement in Thailand differs from movements in Australia, Canada, and the United States where Indigenous Peoples must perform their cultural distinctiveness to maintain political recognition, and in turn are accused of being not different enough when exercising their rights. In Thailand, rather, Indigenous Peoples are accused of being not Thai enough in their efforts to push for any political recognition. While the Thai government denies the relevance of the concept of Indigeneity to Thailand, it is clear that the Indigenous movement in Thailand has grown since the early 2000s. In fact, state policies between the 1950s and early 2000s contributed toward the scaling-up of a pan-Hill tribe identity among the core groups associated with the movement.
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Buultjens, Jeremy, e Grant Cairncross. "Event tourism in remote areas: an examination of the Birdsville Races". Journal of Place Management and Development 8, n. 1 (9 marzo 2015): 69–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jpmd-07-2014-0010.

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Purpose – The purpose of this paper was to examine the direct economic and social benefits accruing from the Birdsville Races. The paper also explores how strategic place marketing has been used to shape the image of the destination, and how this has provided a boost to tourism visitation to periods outside of the event. Design/methodology/approach – This study was based around a textual analysis of online discourse, interviews with local residents and business owners and a survey of visitors. Findings – The data indicate that the Races make a solid contribution to the local, regional and state economy; however the local economic benefits are relatively limited due to the high level of leakages. It is also clear that the Races provide important social benefits by generating a strong sense of history, togetherness and engagement among the local community. Another important benefit is the national and international exposure the event receives, enabling the generation of additional economic benefits. Research limitations/implications – The practical implications of this study are that regardless of its size and/or location, the staging of a high-quality event or festival can help a destination to market itself effectively, both nationally and internationally. This exposure will generate additional benefits to the destination, region, state and nation. A successful event can also enable a destination attract substantial government funding that can further enhance the event experience. Originality/value – This paper illustrates that an event hosted in a very remote destination in outback Australia can provide direct benefits as well as indirect benefits. Place marketing can also allow the generation of an “iconic” image for a destination.
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Thompson, Susan. "Planning Australia An overview of urban and regional planning". Australian Planner 46, n. 1 (gennaio 2009): 60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07293682.2009.9995296.

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Alexander, Elinor, e Alan Sansome. "Shaping the Cooper Basin's 21st century renaissance". APPEA Journal 52, n. 2 (2012): 690. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/aj11104.

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The Department of Manufacturing, Innovation, Trade, Resources and Energy (DMITRE) SA has been successfully using competitive acreage releases to manage highly prospective Cooper Basin acreage since 1998. The expiry of long-term exploration licenses enabled the most significant structured release of onshore Australian acreage in the industry’s history—it has generated: 32 petroleum exploration licences (PELs) from ~70,000 km2 acreage; $432 million in guaranteed work program bids; 70 new field discoveries; $107.6 million royalties and $1.4 billion sales;and, increased gas supply-side competition. Cooper acreage turnover has also changed the makeup of Australia’s onshore exploration industry from numerous company-making discoveries. Since 1998, 10 acreage releases have been staged, enabled by the Petroleum Act 2000 (now the Petroleum and Geothermal Energy Act 2000), conjunctive agreements with Native Title claimants, access to multiple-use Innamincka and Strzelecki Regional Reserves, and transparent application and bid assessment processes. Despite delays, most recently due to flooding, all but three of the original PELs are in their second term and relinquished acreage has been incorporated into subsequent releases. All work-program variations have been kept above the second bid score (except one, where the second ranked bidder was consulted and approved the change) preserving bidding system integrity. DMITRE is planning new Cooper Basin acreage releases while contemplating acreage management options for emerging unconventional plays. Industry input to map the best possible future for the SA Cooper Basin continues to be welcomed.
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26

Huxley, Margo. "Urban and Regional Planning in Western Australia". New Zealand Geographer 50, n. 2 (ottobre 1994): 56–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1745-7939.1994.tb00423.x.

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27

Hirsch, Philip. "Emerging Issues In Southeast Asian Geography: Local, Non-Local and Collaborative Scholarship". TRaNS: Trans -Regional and -National Studies of Southeast Asia 1, n. 1 (gennaio 2013): 105–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/trn.2012.4.

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AbstractThis paper reviews several prominent journals to identify key trends and issues in Southeast Asian geography. The review identifies the locus of articles' geographical scholarship, the balance between issue-based versus other types of articles, and the trends in the subject matter of the issue-based publications. The paper considers the meaning of an ‘issue-based’ approach to geography in local and non-local geographical scholarship on and in Southeast Asia. Geography as taught and practiced in Southeast Asia has followed a largely idiographic tradition based on description of landscapes, regions, settlement patterns, and so on. At an applied level, geography in some Southeast Asian countries has tended toward regional planning rather than engaging more centrally with the social sciences. Geography as a critical social science has only a loose purchase in the inherently geographical debates around development, environment, globalisation, and regionalisation in Southeast Asia. On the other hand, geographers from outside the region have engaged in more critical study, and geographical teaching and research on Southeast Asia in Australasia, North America, and Europe tends to take an issue-based approach and to be situated broadly within the realm of ‘development geography’. The paper also concludes with the question of how the discipline can better serve an issue-based agenda without being dominated by western critical social science.
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28

Woodward, Dennis, e Jennifer Curtin. "Rural and regional Australia". Australian Cultural History 28, n. 1 (aprile 2010): 113–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07288430903165337.

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29

Sorensen, Tony, e Herb Weinand. "Regional Weil-Being in Australia Revisited". Australian Geographical Studies 29, n. 1 (aprile 1991): 42–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8470.1991.tb00707.x.

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30

Miller, Caroline. "Planning Australia: An Overview of Urban and Regional Planning (Second Edition)". Urban Policy and Research 30, n. 4 (29 ottobre 2012): 463–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08111146.2012.729692.

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31

Thakur, Ramesh. "Australia´s Regional Engagement". Contemporary Southeast Asia 20, n. 1 (aprile 1998): 1–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1355/cs20-1a.

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32

Nairn, R., e D. Stewart. "Best Practice in Planning Transport Infrastructure for Regional Australia". Australian Journal of Multi-Disciplinary Engineering 7, n. 2 (gennaio 2009): 225–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14488388.2009.11464817.

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33

Patmore, Greg. "Working Lives in Regional Australia: Labour History and Local History". Labour History, n. 78 (2000): vi. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/27516695.

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34

MOIR, JOHN. "REGIONAL PARKS IN PERTH, WESTERN AUSTRALIA". Australian Planner 32, n. 2 (gennaio 1995): 88–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07293682.1995.9657667.

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35

TAYLOR, MICHAEL. "Economic Restructuring and Regional Change in Australia". Australian Geographical Studies 29, n. 2 (ottobre 1991): 255–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8470.1991.tb00719.x.

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36

Tonts, Matthew, e Fiona Haslam-McKenzie. "Neoliberalism and changing regional policy in Australia". International Planning Studies 10, n. 3-4 (agosto 2005): 183–200. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13563470500378861.

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37

Hicks, Neville. "Formula Funding and Regional Planning of Health Services in Australia". Milbank Memorial Fund Quarterly. Health and Society 63, n. 4 (1985): 671. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3349854.

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38

Dufty-Jones, Rae, e Felicity Wray. "Planning regional development in Australia: questions of mobility and borders". Australian Planner 50, n. 2 (giugno 2013): 109–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07293682.2013.776979.

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39

Glasson, John, Stephen Jennings e David Wood. "Regional Planning In Western Australia: New Initiatives, But Old Problems?" Urban Policy and Research 15, n. 1 (marzo 1997): 31–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08111149708551637.

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40

Martin, Ged. "A History of Australia". Round Table 102, n. 1 (febbraio 2013): 109–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00358533.2013.764164.

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41

Laverty, J. R. "The Study of City and Regional History in Australia". Australian Journal of Politics & History 41 (28 giugno 2008): 103–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8497.1995.tb01084.x.

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42

Semple, Anne-Louise. "Music festivals and regional development in Australia". Australian Geographer 44, n. 2 (giugno 2013): 220–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00049182.2013.799054.

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43

Ahammad, Helal, e Nazrul Islam. "REGIONAL AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION SYSTEMS: ESTIMATES FOR WESTERN AUSTRALIA". Review of Urban and Regional Development Studies 16, n. 3 (novembre 2004): 189–209. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-940x.2005.00089.x.

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44

Paris, Chris. "THE CHANGING URBAN AND REGIONAL SYSTEM IN AUSTRALIA". Australian Planner 28, n. 1 (marzo 1990): 25–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07293682.1990.9657442.

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45

Mckenzie, Fiona Haslam, e Matthew Tonts. "The re-emergence of regional policy and planning in Western Australia". Planning Practice and Research 20, n. 2 (maggio 2005): 201–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02697450500414702.

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46

Petrow, Stefan. "Town Planning in Regional Australia: The Case of Launceston 1915–45". Urban Policy and Research 31, n. 3 (settembre 2013): 325–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08111146.2013.778197.

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47

Bromley, Ray. "Metropolitan Regional Planning: Enigmatic History, Global Future". Planning Practice and Research 16, n. 3-4 (agosto 2001): 233–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02697450120107862.

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48

Bisley, Nick. "Australia and Asia’s Trilateral Dilemmas". Asian Survey 54, n. 2 (marzo 2014): 297–318. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/as.2014.54.2.297.

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Abstract (sommario):
Asia’s middle powers face a trilateral dilemma stemming from their relationships with the U.S. and China. This paper uses the Australian example to examine the dilemma. It shows that Australia has bound itself to the U.S. because of domestic political factors, cost considerations, a belief that it can keep its interests separate, and its perception of regional threats. The paper then argues that others are likely to resolve their trilateral dilemmas in ways that make the regional strategic dynamic more competitive.
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49

Morrison, Tiffany H. "Multiscalar Governance and Regional Environmental Management in Australia". Space and Polity 11, n. 3 (dicembre 2007): 227–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13562570701811551.

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50

Bedford, Richard. "The IGU Regional Conference, Brisbane, Australia, July 2006". New Zealand Geographer 63, n. 1 (aprile 2007): 71–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1745-7939.2007.088_7.x.

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