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<name type="primary">Aboriginal Population Profiles for Development Planning in the Northern East Kimberley</name>
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<description type="full">&lt;p&gt;John &#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
              &lt;p&gt;The Northern East Kimberley region of Western Australia is poised &#13;
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&#13;
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                population (almost all Aboriginal) is highly dependent on welfare, &#13;
&#13;
                mostly outside the mainstream labour market, and ill-equipped &#13;
&#13;
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              &lt;p&gt;Aboriginal people are major stakeholders in the region as its &#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
                are made about future development, it is essential that they bring &#13;
&#13;
                about improvements in Aboriginal participation, not least because &#13;
&#13;
                of the high opportunity cost to Aboriginal people and to government &#13;
&#13;
                of failing to do so.&lt;/p&gt;&#13;
&#13;
              &lt;p&gt;This study profiles social and economic conditions in the region, &#13;
&#13;
                focusing on the Aboriginal population. It examines demography, &#13;
&#13;
                the labour market, income, education and training, housing and &#13;
&#13;
                infrastructure, health status, and regional involvement in the &#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
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<name type="primary">Adelaide Steamship Co Ltd</name>
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<name type="primary">Agency, contingency and census process</name>
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<description type="full">&lt;p&gt;The Indigenous Enumeration Strategy (IES) of the Australian National Census of Population and Housing has evolved over the years in response to the perceived ?difference? of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander populations. Its defining characteristics are the use of locally recruited, mostly Indigenous collector interviewers, and the administration of a modified collection instrument in discrete Indigenous communities, mostly in remote Australia.&lt;/p&gt;&#13;
	&lt;p&gt;The research reported here is unique. The authors, with the assistance of the Australian Bureau of Statistics, were able to follow the workings of the IES in the 2006 Census from the design of the collection instrument to the training of temporary census field staff at the Northern Territory?s Census Management Unit in Darwin, to the enumeration in four remote locations, through to the processing stage at the Data Processing Centre in Melbourne. This allowed the tracking of data from collection to processing, and an assessment of the effects of information flows on the quality of the data, both as input and output.&lt;/p&gt;&#13;
	&lt;p&gt;This study of the enumeration involved four very different locations: a group of small outstation communities (Arnhem Land), a large Aboriginal township (Wadeye), an ?open? town with a majority Aboriginal population (Fitzroy Crossing), and the minority Aboriginal population of a major regional centre (Alice Springs). A comparison between these contexts reveals differences that reflect the diversity of remote Aboriginal Australia, but also commonalities that exert a powerful influence on the effectiveness of the IES, in particular very high levels of short-term mobility. The selection of sites also allowed a comparison between the enumeration process in the Northern Territory, where a time-extended rolling count was explicitly planned for, and Western Australia, where a modified form of the standard count had been envisaged.&lt;/p&gt;&#13;
	&lt;p&gt;The findings suggest that the IES has reached a point in its development where the injection of ever-increasing resources into essentially the same generic set and structure of activities may be producing diminishing returns. There is a need for a new kind of engagement between the Australian Bureau of Statistics and local government and Indigenous community-sector organisations in remote Australia. The agency and local knowledge of Indigenous people could be harnessed more effectively through an ongoing relationship with such organisations, to better address the complex contingencies confronting the census process in remote Indigenous Australia.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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<description type="full">&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;Agenda&lt;/em&gt;  is the quarterly journal of the Faculty of Economics and Commerce at The Australian National University.  Launched in 1994, &lt;em&gt;Agenda&lt;/em&gt; provides a forum for debate on public policy, mainly (but not exclusively) in Australia and New Zealand. It deals largely with economic issues but gives space to social and legal policy and also to the moral and philosophical foundations and implications of policy.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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<description type="full">&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;Agenda&lt;/em&gt;  is the quarterly journal of the Faculty of Economics and Commerce at The Australian National University.  Launched in 1994, &lt;em&gt;Agenda&lt;/em&gt; provides a forum for debate on public policy, mainly (but not exclusively) in Australia and New Zealand. It deals largely with economic issues but gives space to social and legal policy and also to the moral and philosophical foundations and implications of policy.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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<description type="full">&lt;p&gt;This collection contains electronic versions of ANU Theses deposited voluntarily by the authors.&lt;/p&gt;&#13;
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<description type="full">&lt;p&gt;This collection of papers is concerned with issues of policy development, practice, implementation and performance. It represents a range of views about diverse subjects by individuals who are, for the most part, in the public eye and who have the capacity to influence the shape and the reality of public policy. Each has a story to tell, with insights that can only be drawn by those working at the 'sharp end' of policy.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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<description type="full">&lt;p&gt;This study presents the contemporary Islamic resurgence movement among young people in Bandung Indonesia, focusing on its emergence, development and routinisation. It traces various factors and conditions that contributed to the emergence of the movement. It also tries to explain how and why young people (students in particular) turn to Islam, and how the movement is organised and developed among students. Finally, it examines internal changes among various Islamic groups as responses to social, political and cultural changes.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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<description type="full">&lt;p&gt;?H.W. Arndt has been Australia?s leading scholar of&#13;
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        &lt;p&gt;The year of Heinz Wolfgang Arndt?s birth, 1915, was&#13;
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        &lt;p&gt; This was a man of inexhaustible energy and optimism,&#13;
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<description type="full">&lt;p&gt;Although the immense process of economic and social transformation currently underway in China and Vietnam is well known, less attention has been devoted to the process of Chinese and Vietnamese legal change.&lt;p&gt;&#13;
&lt;p&gt;Asian Socialism and Legal Change brings together experts to analyse recent developments in the legal sphere, representing the diversity and dynamism of this process. This book is the first systematic analysis of legal change in Asian transitional economies.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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<description type="full">&lt;p&gt;This monograph presents the peer-reviewed proceedings of the CAEPR conference on Indigenous Socioeconomic Outcomes: Assessing Recent Evidence, held at The Australian National University in August 2005. It presents the latest evidence on Indigenous economic and social status, and family and community life, and discusses its implications for government policy. &lt;/p&gt;&#13;
						&lt;p&gt;The main focus of this volume is on analysing the 2002 National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Survey (NATSISS) outputs and issues about how to interpret the data. It also offers some assessment of changes in Indigenous social conditions over time and examines how Indigenous people fared vis-�-vis other Australians in other statistical collections. The discussion of the broad Indigenous policy context by three prominent Indigenous Australians?Larissa Berhendt, Tom Calma, and Geoff Scott?explores different perspectives.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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<description type="full">&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;A Time Bomb Lies Buried&lt;/em&gt; discusses the debates which took place in Suva and London as well as the politics and processes which led Fiji to independence in 1970 after 96 years of colonial rule. It provides an essential background to understanding the crises and convulsions which have haunted Fiji ever since in its search for a constitutional settlement for its multiethnic population.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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<description type="full">&lt;p&gt;The articles in this collection were first published in the &lt;em&gt;Canberra Times&lt;/em&gt; between&#13;
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<description type="full">&lt;p&gt;This monograph brings together some of the best practitioners of the art and craft of political biography in Australia. They are simultaneously some of our best scholars who, at least in part, have turned their attention to writing Australian political lives. They are not merely chroniclers of our times but multidisciplinary analysts constructing layers of explanation and theoretical insight. They include academic, professional and amateur biographers; scholars from a range of disciplines (politics, history, sociology, public administration, gender studies); and politicians who for a time strutted the political stage. The assembled papers explore the strengths and weaknesses of the biographical approach; the enjoyment it can deliver; the problems and frustrations of writing biographies; and the various ways the ?project? can be approached by those constructing these lives. They probe the art and craft of the political biographer.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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<description type="full">&lt;p&gt;The Australian nation is a work in progress. So conclude the authors whose views are represented in this most recent offering in the ANZSOG monograph series, &lt;em&gt;Australia Under Construction: Nation-building past, present and future&lt;/em&gt;. From its beginnings as a settler society through to present day concerns about ?broadbanding the nation?, the nation-building narrative has resonated with Australians. The very idea of nation-building has both excited the popular imagination about what we might achieve as a society and a nation, and has occasioned despair about missed opportunities. The eleven authors contributing to this monograph reflect on these, and other themes from a variety of perspectives. They challenge our understanding of the term ?nation-building?, reflect on its contemporary relevance as a framework for public policy and even re-appraise the contribution of past ?iconic? nation-building endeavours. To this subject the authors bring intelligence, wit and a healthy distain for sacred cows. A stimulating read for anyone interested in the history, challenges and prospects of nation-building in Australia.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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<description type="full">&lt;p&gt;Fifteen years after its fi rst publication, &lt;i&gt;Black Words White Page&lt;/i&gt; remains as fresh as ever. This award-winning study ? the first comprehensive treatment of the nature and significance of Indigenous Australian literature ? was based upon the author?s doctoral research at The Australian National University and was first published by UQP in 1989. Adam Shoemaker combines historical and literary analysis as he explores the diversity and difference of writings that have gained increasing strength and visibility since that time. Shoemaker?s special focus is those dynamic years between 1963 and 1988, when advances in Indigenous affairs were paralleled by a rapid growth of all types of Black Australian literature. He examines the achievements of leading figures in the Aboriginal movement such as Jack Davis, Kevin Gilbert, Charles Perkins and Oodgeroo. He also provides intriguing insights into the socio-political contexts of the time while tracing the history of blackwhite relations in Australia. Black Words White Page also offers some provocative re-evaluations of white Australian writers Xavier Herbert, Ion Idriess, Katharine Susannah Prichard, Patrick White and Judith Wright.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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<description type="full">&lt;p&gt;Under a Memorandum of Understanding between Indonesia and Australia, traditional Indonesian fishermen are permitted access to fish in a designated area inside the 200 nautical mile Australian Fishing Zone (AFZ). However, crew and vessels are regularly apprehended for illegal fishing activity outside the permitted areas and, after prosecution in Australian courts, their boats and equipment are destroyed and the fishermen repatriated to Indonesia.  This is an ethnographic study of one group of Indonesian maritime people who operate in the AFZ. It concerns Bajo people who originate from villages in the Tukang Besi Islands, Southeast Sulawesi. It explores the social, cultural, economic and historic conditions which underpin Bajo sailing and fishing voyages in the AFZ. It also examines issues concerning Australian maritime expansion and Australian government policies, treatment and understanding of Bajo fishing. The study considers the concept of "traditional" fishing regulating access to the MOU area based on use of unchanging technology, and consequences arising from adherence to such a view of "traditional"; the effect of Australian maritime expansion on Bajo fishing activity; the effectiveness of policy in providing for fishing rights and stopping illegal activity, and why Bajo continue to fish in the AFZ despite a range of ongoing restrictions on their activity.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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<description type="full">&lt;p&gt;The Western and Central Pacific Ocean is home to the largest tuna fishery in the world - around half of the world?s tuna supply - and is a vital economic resource for Pacific island countries. &lt;/p&gt;&#13;
    &lt;p&gt;The potential of the Pacific tuna fishery to contribute to economic development in the Pacific island countries is enormous, but will require a cooperative regional strategy to maximise access fees from distant water fishing nations, as well as targeted domestic policy and legislation to encourage local fishing industries. Together with the importance of acting strategically with regard to such a variable resource, the lesson of fisheries management globally is that it is most effective when it takes into consideration social, cultural and political contexts. &lt;/p&gt;&#13;
    &lt;p&gt;Based on an extensive study of six Pacific island states, Capturing Wealth from Tuna maps out the aspirations and limitations of six Pacific island countries and proposes strategies for capturing more wealth from this resource in a sustainable and socially equitable manner.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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<description type="full">&lt;p&gt;In this monograph, Anne Tiernan and Jennifer Menzies capably chart the often hazardous terrain of the ?caretaker period? that ensues from the time an election is called until a new government is formed. This is a landscape fraught with political and administrative dangers - particularly for public servants who are required to ?mind the shop? and keep the basic machinery of government going. The conventions represent an historical accretion of custom, practice and rules, often leavened with uncertainty. In tackling their subject, Tiernan and Menzies draw upon their shared past experiences as public servants and ministerial ?staffers? as well as the highest standards of academic scholarship - this is a ?must read? for politicians, public servants and students of government.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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<description type="full">&lt;p&gt;China?s prosperity is at the core  of the emerging Platinum Age of global economic growth. Rapid economic growth  has been underpinned by expansion in its domestic markets, and the integration  of domestic and international markets in goods, services, capital, labour and  foreign exchange. Global commodity prices have reached historic highs, while China?s capital  outflows have helped to hold down interest rates worldwide. Linking markets,  both domestic and international, has been key to China?s success. &lt;/p&gt;&#13;
	&lt;p&gt;In sustaining its strong  economic growth, China  has become one of the world?s most voracious consumers of energy. The challenge  now facing the government and people of China is in achieving cooperation  with the international community to avert the costs?both economic and  environmental?of accelerating energy consumption.&lt;/p&gt;&#13;
	&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;China?Linking  Markets for Growth&lt;/em&gt; gathers together leading scholars on China?s economic success and its  effect on the world economy into the next few decades.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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<description type="full">      &lt;h4&gt;About this Chinese Digital Archive&lt;/h4&gt;&#13;
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      &lt;p&gt;Scholarly Information Services/The Library at ANU holds a number of unique &#13;
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      &lt;p&gt;The material selected for inclusion in this database have been in the &#13;
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<description type="full">&lt;p&gt;Coastal archaeology in Australia differs in many respects from that of other areas, with the&#13;
          potential to examine relatively fine-scale variation. Nevertheless, there has been a general&#13;
          tendency in Australian archaeology to play down the variability and to subsume the&#13;
          evidence into broader homogenising models of Aboriginal cultural change. This case&#13;
          study clearly and self-consciously addresses the need to focus on local and regional&#13;
        patterns before moving on to more general levels of explanation.&lt;/p&gt;&#13;
&#13;
        &lt;p&gt; &lt;em&gt;Coastal Themes&lt;/em&gt; builds a detailed chronology of Aboriginal occupation for the southern&#13;
          Curtis Coast in Queensland. Innovative analyses refine radiocarbon dates and explore&#13;
          discard behaviours and post-depositional processes affecting the integrity of coastal&#13;
          archaeological sites. The resulting insights highlight major changes in Aboriginal use of&#13;
          this region over the last 5,000 years and disjunctions between the course of occupation in&#13;
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<description type="full">&lt;p&gt;It is well known that human activities are endangering the stability and sustainability of many fragile&#13;
          ecosystems to such an extent that their future is in doubt. At the same time, these ecosystems are&#13;
          inherently challenging to manage successfully because of the complexity and uncertainty associated&#13;
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        interact with one another and how this interactive behaviour affects these ecosystems as time passes.&lt;/p&gt;&#13;
&#13;
        &lt;p&gt;Fortunately, a new kind of science is helping us deepen our understanding of how human ecosystems&#13;
          might grow and change over time. Beyond a mere collation of various reflections and applications,&#13;
          the chapters in this book aim to convince the reader that this new kind of science is worthy of our&#13;
          attention. It is a science that fully embraces the complexity of our surrounding world. It is also a science&#13;
          that addresses the frontiers of interactions between human behaviour and environmental responses.&#13;
          Furthermore, it is a science that challenges our limited understanding and treatment of uncertainty.&#13;
          And finally, because it is socially embedded, it is a science that can generate partnerships with local&#13;
          communities in a constructive manner.&lt;/p&gt;&#13;
        &lt;p&gt;We hope that you will enjoy the reading of such a diverse ?ouvrage? whose purpose is to attract more early&#13;
          career scientists into our field of research and to convince decision-makers that a growing contingent&#13;
          of colleagues working on complexity theory can provide useful tools and methods to better understand&#13;
          complex and adaptive environments. It is time to reassure you (the reader) that the rise of a ?Complex&#13;
          Science for a Complex World? doesn?t mean more complicated relationships between science and&#13;
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<name type="primary">Conflict and Resource Development in the Southern Highlands of Papua New Guinea</name>
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<description type="full">&lt;p&gt;The Southern Highlands is one of Papua New Guinea?s most resource-rich provinces, but for a number of years the province has been riven by conflict. Longstanding inter-group rivalries, briefly set aside during the colonial period, have been compounded by competition for the benefits provided by the modern state and by fighting over the distribution of returns from the several big mining and petroleum projects located within the province or impinging upon it. Deaths from the various conflicts over the past decade number in the hundreds. As a result of inter-group fighting, criminal activity and vandalism, a number of businesses have withdrawn from the province. Roadblocks and ambushes have made travel dangerous in many parts and expatriate missionaries and aid workers have left. Many public servants have abandoned their posts with the result that state services are not provided. Corruption is rife. Police are often reluctant to act because they are outnumbered and outgunned.&lt;/p&gt;&#13;
        &lt;p&gt;This volume brings together a number of authors with deep experience of the Southern Highlands to examine the underlying dynamics of resource development and conflict in the province. Its primary purpose is to provide some background to recent events, but the authors also explore possible approaches to limiting the human and economic costs of the ongoing conflict and breakdown of governance.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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<description type="full">&lt;p&gt;This volume brings together historians of imperialism and race, travel and modernity, Islam and India, the Pacific and the Atlantic to show how a 'transnational' approach to history offers fresh insights into the past. Transnational history is a form of scholarship that has been revolutionising our understanding of history in the last decade. With a focus on interconnectedness across national borders of ideas, events, technologies and individual lives, it moves beyond the national frames of analysis that so often blinker and restrict our understanding of the past. Many of the essays also show how expertise in 'Australian history' can contribute to and benefit from new transnational approaches to history. Through an examination of such diverse subjects as film, modernity, immigration, politics and romance, &lt;em&gt;Connected Worlds&lt;/em&gt; weaves an historical matrix which transports the reader beyond the local into a realm which re-defines the meaning of humanity in all its complexity. Contributors include Tony Ballantyne, Desley Deacon, John Fitzgerald, Patrick Wolfe and Angela Woollacott.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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<description type="full">&lt;p&gt;Representing the combined energies of a large group of authors, editors, artists and researchers associated with Bruce Hall at the ANU, &lt;em&gt;Cross-sections&lt;/em&gt; collects a range of works (from academic articles and essays to photography, digital art and installation artwork) that represents the disciplinary breadth and artistic vitality of the ANU.&lt;/p&gt;&#13;
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<description type="full"> &lt;p&gt; Throughout &#13;
                the South Pacific, notions of ?culture? and ?development? &#13;
                are very much alive?in political debate, the media, sermons, &#13;
                and endless discussions amongst villagers and the urban �lites, &#13;
                even in policy reports. &lt;br&gt;&#13;
                &lt;br&gt;&#13;
                Often the terms are counterposed, and development along with ?economic &#13;
                rationality?, ?good governance? and ?progress? &#13;
                is set against culture or ?custom?, ?tradition? &#13;
                and ?identity?. The decay of custom and impoverishment &#13;
                of culture are often seen as wrought by development, while failures &#13;
                of development are haunted by the notion that they are due, somehow, &#13;
                to the darker, irrational influences of culture. &lt;br&gt;&#13;
                &lt;br&gt;&#13;
                The problem is to resolve the contradictions between them so as &#13;
                to achieve the greater good?access to material goods, welfare &#13;
                and amenities, ?modern life??without the sacrifice &#13;
                of the ?traditional? values and institutions that &#13;
                provide material security and sustain diverse social identities. &#13;
                &lt;br&gt;&#13;
                &lt;br&gt;&#13;
                Resolution is sought in this book by a number of leading writers &#13;
                from the South Pacific including Langi Kavaliku, Epeli Hau?ofa, &#13;
                Marshall Sahlins, Malama Meleisea, Joeli Veitayaki, and Tarcisius &#13;
                Tara Kabutaulaka. The volume is brought together for UNESCO by &#13;
                Antony Hooper, Professor Emeritus at the University of Auckland. &#13;
                UNESCO experts include Richard Engelhardt, Langi Kavaliku, Russell &#13;
                Marshall, Malama Meleisea, Edna Tait and Mali Voi. &lt;/p&gt;</description>
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<description type="full">&lt;p&gt;R. H. Mathews (1841-1918) was an Australian-born surveyor and self-taught anthropologist. From 1893 until his death in 1918, he made it his mission to record all ?new and interesting facts? about Aboriginal Australia. Despite falling foul with some of the most powerful figures in British and Australian anthropology, Mathews published some 2200 pages of anthropological reportage in English, French and German. His legacy is an outstanding record of Aboriginal culture in the Federation period.&lt;/p&gt;&#13;
	&lt;p&gt;This first edited collection of Mathews? writings represents the many facets of his research, ranging from kinship study to documentation of myth. It include eleven articles translated from French or German that until now have been unavailable in English. Introduced and edited by Martin Thomas, who compellingly analyses the anthropologist, his milieu, and the intrigues that were so costly to his reputation, &lt;em&gt;Culture in Translation&lt;/em&gt; is essential reading on the history of cross-cultural research.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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<description type="full">&lt;p&gt;The main theme of this volume is a discussion of the ways in which legal mechanisms, such as the &lt;em&gt;Land Groups Incorporation Act&lt;/em&gt; (1974) in PNG, and the &lt;em&gt;Native Title Act&lt;/em&gt; (1993) in Australia, do not, as they purport, serve merely to identify and register already-existing customary indigenous landowning groups in these countries. Because the legislation is an integral part of the way in which indigenous people are defined and managed in relation to the State, it serves to elicit particular responses in landowner organisation and self-identification on the part of indigenous people. These pieces of legislation actively contour the progressive evolution of landowner social, territorial and political organisation at all levels in these nation states. The contributors to this volume provide in-depth anthropological case studies of social structural and cultural transformations engendered by the confrontation between states, developers and indigenous communities over rights to customarily owned land.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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<description type="full">&lt;p&gt;The frontier is one of the most pervasive concepts underlying the production of national identity in Australia. Recently it has become a highly contested domain in which visions of nationhood are argued out through analysis of frontier conflict.&lt;/p&gt;&#13;
&#13;
						&#13;
						&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;Dislocating the Frontier &lt;/em&gt;departs from this contestation and takes a critical approach to the frontier imagination in Australia. The authors of this book work with frontier theory in comparative and unsettling modes. The essays reveal diverse aspects of frontier images and dreams ? as manifested in performance, decolonising domains, language, and cross-cultural encounters. &lt;/p&gt;&#13;
						&#13;
						&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;Dislocating the Frontier&lt;/em&gt; takes readers beyond the notion of a progressive or disastrous frontier to a more radical rethinking of the frontier imagination itself.</description>
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<description type="full">&lt;p&gt;Over the last twenty years, advanced communication technologies have become pervasive throughout Western society. These technologies have not only revolutionised the delivery of public and private services, they have shaped consumers' expectations about service quality.&lt;/p&gt;&#13;
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						&lt;p&gt;An engaging, provocative and thorough survey of available technologies and potential applications, this is a 'must read' for policy and program practitioners who are considering options for electronic engagement.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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<description type="full">&lt;p&gt;�En sentido estricto, ?el Pac�fico? no existi� &#13;
          como tal hasta que en 1520-21 Fernao de Magalh�is, m�s &#13;
          conocido como Magallanes, atraves� la enorme extensi�n &#13;
          de aguas que entonces recibieron su nombre�. Con estas palabras, &#13;
          el historiador y ge�grafo de origen brit�nico Oskar Spate &#13;
          presenta su versi�n del proceso en el que ese inmenso vac�o &#13;
          se transforma en centro de las relaciones globales. El lago espa�ol &#13;
          describe el �xito esencialmente europeo y americano en convertir &#13;
          ese espacio en el nexo del poder econ�mico y militar.&lt;/p&gt;&#13;
        &lt;p&gt; Este trabajo es una historia del Pac�fico, el oc�ano &#13;
          que se convirti� en el escenario del poder y el conflicto conformado &#13;
          por la pol�tica de Europa y el contexto econ�mico de la &#13;
          Am�rica espa�ola. S�lo pod�a haber un concepto &#13;
          de �el Pac�fico� una vez establecido el 