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Displaying results 2071 to 2080 of 2658.
Undergraduate publishing: What is it, and what do you want from it? »
Want to get published and don’t know how; think traditional publishing outlets are outdated and in need of a revamp? ANU Press is examining the future of undergraduate publishing and we want to hear from you. The Press will be hosting an informal discussion about publishing as an undergraduate and
Book Launch: Popular Music, Stars & Stardom »
Please join Dr Stephen Loy, Dr Julie Rickwood and Associate Professor Samantha Bennett as they launch their edited book Popular Music Stars and Stardom. The event will focus on a discussion of the book and its main themes surrounding fascination with popular music and its stars past and present. A
Book Launch: Atlas of Butterflies and Diurnal Moths in the Monsoon Tropics of Northern Australia »
The ANU Press title, Atlas of Butterflies and Diurnal Moths in the Monsoon Tropics of Northern Australia will be launched on 28 February 2019 at the Museum and Art Gallery of the Northern Territory in Darwin. anupress@anu.edu.au atlas_butterflies_moths_web_banner.jpg Book launch Thursday, 28
Book Launch: A New Rival State »
Professor Frank Bongiorno AM of the ANU School of History will launch the new book A New Rival State? Australia in Tsarist Diplomatic Communications, followed by Emeritus Professor Richard Rigby and Dr Elena Govor. This book is a unique collection of dispatches written in 1857–1917 by the Russian
Book Launch: The Court as Archive »
ANU Press, the Federal Court of Australia and the Centre for International and Public Law, ANU, invites you to the launch of The Court as Archive, edited by Ann Genovese, Trish Luker and Kim Rubenstein. The book will be launched by The Hon. Justice Susan Kenny of the Federal Court of Australia.
Book Launch: The Lives of Stories »
To be launched by Mark McKenna The Lives of Stories traces three stories of Aboriginal–settler friendships that intersect with the ways in which Australians remember founding national stories, build narratives for cultural revival, and work on reconciliation and self-determination. These three
Alison Broinoswki »
Dr Alison Broinowski is an Australian former diplomat who, while working in several Asian countries and at the UN in New York, always wrote books on the side, in the hope of emulating Harold Nicholson, J K Galbraith, Nicholas Jose and other diplomat-litterateurs. As a young Arts graduate in Adelaide, she wrote her first review for Australian Book Review in 1962, and has since made a habit of it, concentrating in recent years on books about Asia and on Asian-Australian fiction. After joining the Department of External Affairs in 1963, in the following year she went to Tokyo with her diplomat husband, and began learning Japanese, another life-long task assisted by many return visits to Japan. After working in Manila, she edited three books on ASEAN in its the early years. She brought together Australians writing new-wave fiction about Asian countries for a conference in Canberra in 1979 – Koch, Drewe, d’Alpuget, Pulvers, Margaret Jones and others. After working for two Governors-General, a parting gift from Sir Ninian and Lady Stephen was The Great Wave, about the influence of Japanese art on the French impressionists. It inspired her to investigate Australian equivalents, resulting eight years later in The Yellow Lady – Australian Representations of Asia (1992). The book that followed her ANU PhD thesis reversed the viewpoint, About Face: Asian Accounts of Australia (2003), and papers from a conference on the same subject were published by Pandanus at ANU as Double Vision(2004). Alison has also co-edited The Third Try: Can the UN Work?(2005), and has written Howard’s War (2003) and Allied and Addicted (2007). Living in Sydney since 2001, she has taught International Relations at Macquarie University, researched Asian Australian fiction at the University of Wollongong, and stood unsuccessfully for the Senate for the WikiLeaks Party in 2013.
James Jupp »
Dr James Jupp AM is an Adjunct Associate Professor in the Australian Demographic and Social Research Institute at the ANU.
He was born in Croydon, England in 1932 and educated at Whitgift School, Croydon, and the London School of Economics (1951–1956) with degrees in Sociology and Political Science. His Masters Thesis was published in 1982 as “The Radical Left in Britain 1931-1941″. He later completed his Doctorate, published in 1978 as “Sri Lanka-Third World Democracy”, retaining an interest in South Asian politics into the present.
Since graduating, Dr Jupp has taught Political Science in the University of Melbourne, the University of York (UK), the University of Waterloo (Canada) and the University of Canberra. Since joining the ANU in 1983 he has specialised in ethnic and immigration studies. His major works include “The Australian People” (1988 and 1992) and the “Encyclopedia of Religion in Australia” (2009), all with Cambridge University Press. For these and other related works he was awarded as a Member of the Order of Australia.
Dr Jupp was a major contributor to Commonwealth reports on multiculturalism and immigrant settlement during the 1980s, including a major report to the Department of Immigration “Don’t Settle for Less” in 1986 and for the Office of Multicultural Affairs in 1989 (“The Challenge of Diversity”). In recent years he has published “Multiculturalism and Integration” with the ANU Press in 2011 with the late Professor Michael Clyne. He is a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences and served as its director .
In pursuit of his interests in ethnicity, migration and ethnic politics he has travelled extensively throughout the whole of Europe and in Russia, North America and southeast Asia. He is a member of the International Political Science Association and a regular participant in its conferences. He has also published jointly with colleagues from the University of Texas. He has delivered papers and lectures in countries as varied as Iceland, Macedonia and Sri Lanka.
Janine O'Flynn »
Janine is Director (Education) in the Crawford School of Economics and Government and her research interests are in public sector management, reform and policy. She has published on a range of related issues including public sector reform in Bhutan, government contracting, relationships with external parties, collaboration, joined-up government, and the effects of reform on employees. Janine is a consulting editor for the Australian Journal of Public Administration and sits on the editorial board of the Journal of Management & Organization.
Quentin Grafton »
Quentin Grafton is Professor of Economics at the Crawford School of Public Policy and Public Policy Fellow at the Australian National University (ANU). He is Chairholder, UNESCO Chair in Water Economics and Transboundary Water Governance; Director of the Centre for Water Economics, Environment and Policy (CWEEP) and Executive Director at the Australian National Institute of Public Policy (ANIPP). He was the first Executive Director and Chief Economist of the Bureau of Resources and Energy Economics (BREE) and served in that role from its formation until July 2013. He has published extensively in the area of environmental and resource economics including in the world’s leading science and economic journals and the author or editor of 15 books.