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Displaying results 2151 to 2160 of 2630.
Book Launch: Everyday Revolutions »
Professor Rae Frances, Dean of the College of Arts and Social Scienes, will launch Everyday Revolutions: Remaking Gender, Sexuality and Culture in 1970s Australia edited by Michelle Arrow and Angela Woollacott. The book brings together new research on the cultural and social impact of the feminist
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ANU Press publishes a number of journals covering a variety of disciplines. Below is a list of our journals. Please select the relevant journal and follow the instructions for submitting an article outlined on the journal's page.
Helen Moyle »
Helen Moyle has been a social researcher for most of her career. She has held senior positions with the Australian Institute of Family Studies, the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare and Commonwealth Government Departments. She has a PhD in Demography from The Australian National University and is an Honorary Fellow at the University of Melbourne.
Lia Kent »
Dr Lia Kent is a Fellow in the School of Regulation and Global Governance, College of Asia and the Pacific at The Australian National University.
ANU Press Publication Ethics and Malpractice Statement »
ANU Press publishes approximately 50–60 books and 6 journals a year. Our mission is to publish works of high scholarly value in an open-access environment, promoting the dissemination of academic research from across the globe. As part of this mission, ANU Press is committed to achieving a high
Campbell Macknight »
Campbell Macknight is an honorary professor in the College of Asia and the Pacific, The Australian National University, and professor emeritus of the University of Tasmania. He has been interested in the past of South Sulawesi in Indonesia for more than 50 years and has published extensively on Bugis philology and the early history of the area. He is also known for his study of the trepang fishermen from Makassar who visited the north Australian coast in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
Muhlis Hadrawi »
Muhlis Hadrawi is a graduate of Hasanuddin University, University of Indonesia and National University of Malaysia. He is currently head of the Department of Regional Literature in the Faculty of Cultural Sciences at Hasanuddin University. He has studied the early Malay contacts with Sulawesi and published on Bugis philology and cultural matters.
Mukhlis Paeni »
Mukhlis Paeni, an historian and anthropologist, is a graduate of Hasanuddin University and Gadjah Mada University. He has contributed in many ways to cultural affairs in South Sulawesi, in addition to his extensive publications. He was largely responsible for the manuscript microfilming project of the National Archives in Makassar, the restoration of the Somba Opu fortress in Makassar and inscribing La Galigo manuscripts on the UNESCO Memory of the World register. He has also served as Director General of the National Archives in Jakarta, as chair of the Association of Indonesian Historians and in many other public and professional roles. He is still active in the Oral Tradition Studies Postgraduate Program at the University of Indonesia.
Sean Ulm »
Sean Ulm is Distinguished Professor of Archaeology at James Cook University and Deputy Director of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Australian Biodiversity and Heritage. He is a Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities, a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London, an Honorary Research Fellow of the Queensland Museum and a Fellow of the Cairns Institute. Sean’s research focuses on persistent problems in the archaeology of northern Australia and the western Pacific where understanding the relationships between environmental change and cultural change using advanced studies of archaeological and palaeoenvironmental sequences are central to constructions of the human past. His priority has been to develop new tools to investigate and articulate co-variability and co-development of human and natural systems. His work has been funded by the Australian Research Council, Australian Institute of Nuclear Sciences and Engineering, Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies, Australian Learning and Teaching Council and French Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique. His publications include more than 100 articles on the archaeology of Australia and 5 books. Sean has conducted research in Australia, Europe, Honduras, Chile, Papua New Guinea and the Pacific. He is a former President of the Australian Archaeological Association Inc., is Editor of Australian Archaeology and Queensland Archaeological Research, and sits on the editorial boards of The Journal of Island and Coastal Archaeology and Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society.
Claire Cronin »
Dr Claire Cronin is a Sessional Lecturer in the Department of International Relations, Coral Bell School of Asia Pacific Affairs, College of Asia and the Pacific at The Australian National University.