Textbooks
Browse or search textbooks or find out more about the publications' authors. Download the ebook for free or buy a print-on-demand copy.
Displaying results 2491 to 2500 of 2658.
Erik Eklund »
Erik Eklund is an award-winning historian and Adjunct Professor of History at The Australian National University. He was Professor of History and Head of School at Monash University from 2008 to 2013 and the Keith Cameron Visiting Professor in Australian History at University College Dublin, Ireland, from 2015 to 2016. He is currently working as the Deputy Director of Navy Research at the Sea Power Centre in Canberra.
Editorial boards »
ANU Press has a number of editorial boards, specialising in disciplines that align with the University’s strategic direction. If you wish to submit a proposal to ANU Press, you will need to know which editorial board is the most appropriate one to submit your work to. If you are not sure which
Lindy Allen »
Lindy Allen is an independent scholar, curator and material culture and cultural heritage specialist. With over 40 years of experience in the museum sector, including as senior curator of Northern Australian Collections at Museums Victoria, Melbourne, from 1989 to 2018, she has worked extensively and developed collaborative cross-cultural research projects with many Indigenous communities across Australia.
Andrew Carr »
Andrew Carr is Senior Lecturer in the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre at The Australian National University. His research focuses on strategy and Australian defence policy. He has published in outlets such as Survival, Parameters, the Journal of Strategic Studies, Australian Foreign Affairs, International Theory, The Washington Quarterly and Comparative Strategy. He is the author or editor of five books with Melbourne University Press, Oxford University Press and Georgetown University Press.
Joan Beaumont »
Joan Beaumont is Professor Emerita in the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre at The Australian National University. She has published extensively on Australia in the two world wars and the Great Depression, including the multiple award-winning Broken Nation: Australians in the Great War (2013).
Marlin Tolla »
Marlin Tolla is a researcher at the Research Center for Archaeometry, Research Organization for Archaeology, Language, and Literature, National Research and Innovation Agency, and the Sulawesi Center for Archaeological Research. She is based in Jayapura, Papua.
Laura McLauchlan »
Laura McLauchlan is a sociocultural anthropologist based at Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia. Her work focuses on the interpersonal, particularly on connection across difference (and the limits of such openness), within environmental and social movements. With expertise in feminist more-than-human ethnography, as well as training in relational neurobiological approaches, her work attends to the interplay of material, biological and cultural aspects of how, when and why we open to one another.
With her non-fiction work employing narrative, illustration, as well as attention to embodied aspects of interpersonal relations, Dregs: Love and Monsters in Small Town New Zealand is her first publication to venture into the realms of the fictional, giving space to the unspoken and unconscious aspects of the region that grew her up.
Wilco van den Heuvel »
Wilco van den Heuvel studied general linguistics at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam and accomplished a PhD thesis on the Biak language in 2006. Following a few years in which he focused on Romani linguistics, he participated in a project at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam investigating the Awyu-Dumut languages, which led to a number of articles and a publication on the Aghu language in 2016. Nowadays, the author combines teaching Dutch as a second language with research on Papuan and Austronesian languages.
Paul Memmott »
Paul Memmott is a trans-disciplinary researcher (architect/anthropologist) and the Director of the Aboriginal Environments Research Collaborative at the University of Queensland. His field of research encompasses the cross-cultural study of Indigenous peoples with their natural and built environments, including Aboriginal housing and settlement design, access to institutional architecture, Indigenous constructs of place and cultural landscapes, vernacular architecture, native title, social planning in Indigenous communities, homelessness and family violence.
Maria Nugent »
Maria Nugent is an historian with the Australian Centre for Indigenous History in the School of History at The Australian National University. Her work spans colonial history and post-colonial memory. Her recent publications include Mistress of Everything: Queen Victoria in Indigenous Worlds (2018, co-edited with Sarah Carter) and Ancestors, Artefacts, Empire: Indigenous Australia in British and Irish Museums (2021, co-edited with Gaye Sculthorpe and Howard Morphy).