Displaying results 2461 to 2470 of 2610.
John Quiggin is a Professor of Economics at the University of Queensland. He is a prominent research economist and commentator on Australian and international economic policy. He has produced over 2000 publications, including ten books and over 300 refereed journal articles, in fields including decision theory, environmental economics and industrial organisation. He is an active contributor to Australian public debate in a wide range of traditional and social media.
Marinella Caruso is Cassamarca senior lecturer in the Italian Studies programme of the University of Western Australia. Her primary research interests include Italian linguistics, the acquisition of Italian L2 and innovative teaching practices. She has published on language contact, Italian in a migratory context, second language education and policy and on the scholarship of teaching and learning (online feedback, adaptive learning and flipped learning). Her current projects are related to Italian language learner motivation, engagement and well-being using Q methodology and other approaches. She is also part of university-wide Communities of Practice fostering active learning and inclusive and accessible teaching.
Diane Elizabeth Barwick (1938–1986), née MacEachern, anthropologist and historian, was born in Vancouver, Canada. She completed a BA (Hons) in anthropology at the University of British Columbia in 1959. She moved to Australia in 1960 to study for a PhD at The Australian National University. Her PhD thesis, ‘A Little More than Kin’ (1964)—a study of Aboriginal communities in Victoria—led to the writing of Rebellion at Coranderrk, as Diane realised that one could not understand the present without knowing the past. She worked as a research fellow in anthropology at ANU (1965–72) and was a founding member of the Australian Institute for Aboriginal Studies (later the Australian Institute for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies). A co-founder of the journal Aboriginal History, she was its editor from 1978 to 1982. A member of of the Aboriginal Treaty Committee, Diane was the author of over 50 articles and co-editor of three books. Extensive memorial articles and a bibliography of her work appear in Aboriginal History, vol. 11 (1987) and vol. 12 (1988).
Since 1977, the journal Aboriginal History has pioneered interdisciplinary historical studies of Australian Aboriginal people’s and Torres Strait Islander’s interactions with non-Indigenous peoples. It has promoted publication of Indigenous oral traditions, biographies, languages, archival and
Thank you for choosing to submit your book to ANU Press. Below you will find all the necessary information for publishing your work with ANU Press, from submitting a book proposal to marketing and promoting your published work. Your manuscript must be relevant to at least one of our editorial
Thank you for choosing to submit your textbook to ANU Press. These works are published under the imprint ANU Press Textbooks. Below you will find all the necessary information for publishing your work with ANU Press, from submitting a textbook proposal to marketing and promoting your published work
The Monographs in Anthropology series offers an opportunity to publish innovative works of theory and ethnography from the Asia-Pacific region. To date, our titles have included studies on such topics as self-determination, mobility, temporality, ritual performance, music, connections to land,
Brad Underhill lectures at Deakin University. He is a past recipient of the Hank Nelson Memorial Award for best PhD internationally on any aspect of Papua New Guinea’s history, a Deakin University Vice-Chancellor’s Prize for academic excellence, and the Bowater Trust medal for best all-round undergraduate student at Deakin University. He has published widely on Papua New Guinea.
Mary Eagle is the author of a number of books about Australian art. Born in 1944, her BA degree was in History as well as Fine Arts and her PhD thesis was a history based on situations represented visually both by Indigenous Australians and European-Australians. Greg Dening’s ethnographic teaching at the University of Melbourne was the key for her approach to art criticism, art history, and curatorship. After eighteen years as a curator at the National Gallery of Australia, seven as the Head of Australian Art, the same influence led her to join The Australian National University’s Centre for Cross-Cultural Research and Humanities Research Centre.
Dylan Gaffney is Associate Professor of Palaeolithic Archaeology in the School of Archaeology, University of Oxford. He is also a Fellow at Hertford College, Lecturer at St Hugh’s College, and Honorary Lecturer in the Archaeology Programme at the University of Otago.