Displaying results 2311 to 2320 of 2610.
Paul Pickering is Director of the ANU Australian Studies Institute. He has published on transnational history, biography, social movements, music and politics, re-enactment as a methodology, industrial heritage, and the use of Linked Data in historical enquiry.
The Australia and the World series was established by the ANU Australian Studies Institute (AuSI) to promote the study of Australia, share research and bring an Australian perspective to comparative, transnational and international projects. Scholarly Information Services
Matthew Cunningham is an author and historian based in the Greater Wellington region of Aotearoa New Zealand. His research specialities include Crown–Māori relations, environmental history and the history of right-wing movements and ideologies. He has written several oral histories, peer-reviewed journal articles, commissioned research reports and public history pieces. This is his first research monograph.
Matthew is also an award-winning children’s author. His first children’s book, Abigail and the birth of the Sun, won the NZCYA Best Picture Books Award for 2020 and was shortlisted for the NZ Booklovers Best Children’s Book Award 2020.
Leila Kouatly is an Arabic lecturer at the Centre for Arab and Islamic Studies – Middle-East and Central Asia (CAIS) at The Australian National University. Before joining CAIS in 2017, Leila was employed as an educational developer by the ANU College of Arts and Social Sciences, where she contributed to the development of the online version of several CAIS Arabic courses. Leila’s research interests include second language acquisition and technology in language teaching.
Daishi Adams is an IT technician contracted by The Australian National University to contribute to ANU Press Languages imprint. In 2016, Daishi worked on the ANU Press title Reading Embraced by Australia, the first volume of an advanced Japanese language comprehension series. Daishi’s interests lie in the use of new technologies in the education field.
Tobias Schwoerer is a senior lecturer in the Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology at the University of Lucerne, Switzerland.
Eric Meadows is an Honorary Fellow in the Contemporary Histories Research Group at Deakin University. He has published on the history of international education in Australia, on the impact of Australia’s immigration policies on its relations with India and on public diplomacy and education. He was formerly Pro-Vice Chancellor (International) at Deakin University, Deputy Principal (International Programs) at the University of Melbourne and started his career as an Australian diplomat in New Delhi and then Tel Aviv.
Matthew Galway is Lecturer of Chinese History at The Australian National University. He is the author of The Emergence of Global Maoism: China’s Red Evangelism and the Cambodian Communist Movement, 1949–1979 (2022) and has published articles in The Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, China Information, Asian Ethnicity and Left History.
Gabrielle Meagher is Professor Emerita in the School of Social Sciences at Macquarie University and affiliated professor in the Department of Social Work at Stockholm University. She collaborates on research exploring the political economy of social services and the organisation of paid care work in social service systems.
Adam Stebbing is a Lecturer in Sociology in the School of Social Sciences at Macquarie University. His research focuses on understanding the impact that the recent shift to support private social provision via ‘social policy by other means’ is having on the Australian welfare state.