272 research outputs found
Portrait of Agnes E. Dodds
Portrait of Agnes E. Dodds, Education Officer, External Studies Unit at Murdoch University.
The complete set of 2 negatives is available at the Murdoch University Library.
These images are part of the History of Murdoch University Collection
Post-colonial Antarctica
This chapter explores how postcolonial perspectives have informed and contributed to ‘critical Antarctic studies’.\ud
\ud
Shortly after Dodds published an essay in Polar Record entitled ‘Post- colonial Antarctica: an emerging engagement’, leading postcolonial theorists posited the ‘The end of post- colonial theory?’ in the journal PMLA (Publications of the Modern Language Association). Lambasting postcolonial theory as irrelevant, parochial and Anglo-centric, 1 their piece captured a powerful current of discontent. But for Robert Young, a leading theorist of post- colonialism and author of field- setting introductions to postcolonial theory and practice, such an obituary seemed out of place and time..
Overtourism: issues, realities and solutions De Gruyter studies in tourism ;, v. 1./ edited by Rachel Dodds and Richard W. Butler.
In English.Includes bibliographical references and index.As tourism has surged, there have been increased concerns expressed about overtourism - a phenomena of unsustainable tourism which negatively affects the livelihoods of local communities and the resources upon which tourism is based. As it is becoming increasingly clear that the environmental, social and economic impacts of tourism on destinations must be managed appropriately to secure their long-term viability, there is a critical need to understand governance and planning tools that can resolve current problems of overtourism without losing the benefits of tourism development. The concerns about overtourism expressed in both academic and popular literature include: too many tourists in one place, rowdy and other inappropriate behaviour by tourists, antagonism between residents and tourists, crowding, strains on infrastructure, loss of authenticity, loss of amenity and reduction in quality of life of residents and reduced enjoyment of experiences by tourists. Overtourism is the first book to examine in detail the origin and causes of overtourism and place the topic in a conceptual context with other forms of tourism including sustainable and mass tourism. It includes a number of case studies of overtourism in both urban and rural settings and discusses potential steps to reduce the impacts on both residents and the natural environment of affected areas. Table of Contents Foreword: Justin Francis, ResponsibleTravel.com Part I: Introduction Introduction (Rachel Dodds and Richard W. Butler) The enablers of overtourism (Rachel Dodds and Richard W. Butler) Part II: Theoretical positioning and implications Perspectives on the environment and overtourism (Geoff Wall) Authenticity and overtourism (Jillian Rickly) The role of social cedia in Creating and addressing overtourism (Ulrike Gretzel) Overtourism and the Tourism Area Life Cycle (Richard W. Butler) Part III: Case studies Boracay beach closure: the role of the government and the private sector (Reil Cruz and Giovanni Legaspi) Thailand: too popular for its own good (Janto Hess) Barcelona - crowding out the locals: a model for tourism management? (Harold Goodwin) Venice: capacity and tourism (Emma Nolan and Hugues Séraphin) Prague and the impact of low cost airlines (Miroslav Rončák) Lucerne and the impact of Asian group tours (Fabian Weber, Florian Eggli, Timo Ohnmacht and Jürg Stettler) The Hajj: crowding and congestion problems for pilgrims and hosts (Jahanzeeb Qurashi) Overtourism in rural settings: the Scottish highlands and islands (Richard W. Butler) Part IV: Challenges Managing overtourism at the municipal/destination level (Walter Jamieson and Michelle Jamieson) Stakeholder management: different interests and different actions (Suzanne Becken and David Simmons) The role of policy, planning and governance in preventing and managing overtourism (Marion Joppe) Conclusion (Rachel Dodds and Richard W. Butler) Editors: Rachel Dodds is a Professor in the School of Hospitality and Tourism Management at Ryerson University in Canada. She has worked extensively in tourism and sustainability and has published extensively on these topics. She co- authored a book on Sustainable Tourism in Islands and has edited journals on sustainable tourism. She is on the Editorial board of a number of journals and is best known for her work on sustainable tourism. Her bio and summary of recent achievements can be found here https://www.ryerson.ca/tedrogersschool/htm/faculty-and-research/faculty-bios/rachel-dodds/ Her google scholar summary can be found here: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=oa1CM94AAAAJ&hl=en Richard Butler is Professor Emeritus from the University of Strathclyde. He has published over twenty books on tourism and many articles and chapters on several aspects of tourism, particularly on destination development and associated impacts of tourism. He is a former president of the International Academy for the Study of Tourism and of the Canadian Association for Leisure Studies, and in 2016 was awarded the Ulysses Medal by the United Nations World Tourism Organisation for excellence in the creation and dissemination of knowledge. Contributors: Dr. Susanne Becken is the Director of the Griffith Institute for Tourism at Griffith University, Australia. Dr. Richard W. Butler is Emeritus Professor at Strathclyde University, Glasgow, UK and Visiting Professor at the Tourism Academy in NHTV University, Breda (the Netherlands). Dr. Reil Cruz is former dean of the University of Philippines Asian Institute of Tourism where he currently heads its tourism and extension division. Dr. Rachel Dodds is a Professor in the School of Hospitality and Tourism Management at Ryerson University, Canada. Florian Eggli is a PhD candidate in Tourism Studies at the University of Lausanne and also works at the Institute of Tourism at the Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts, Switzerland. Dr. Ulrike Gretzel is a Senior Fellow at the Center of Public Relations, University of Southern California, USA. Dr. Harold Goodwin is Professor Emeritus at Manchester Metropolitan University, UK and Director of Responsible Tourism in the Institute of Place Management. Janto Hess is an independent consultant and PhD researcher at University College London (UCL), UK. Professor Walter Jamieson has worked for a number of organisations including: ADB, UNWTO, ESCAP, World Bank, UNESCO, JICA and ASEAN over a career spanning more than 40 years. Michelle Jamieson has worked in the tourism and hospitality industry on a global scale and on a number of regional tourism and tourism marketing strategies including ASEAN. Dr. Marion Joppe is a Professor at the School of Hospitality, Food and Tourism Management, University of Guelph, Canada and President of Tourism Environment. Giovani Francis A. Legaspi is an Assistant Professor at the University of Philippines, Asian Institute of Tourism. Emma Nolan has 25 years' experience as an event management practitioner and academic. Dr. Timo Ohnmacht is a sociologist and Professor at the Institute of Tourism at the Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts, Switzerland. Dr. Jahanzeeb Qurashi achieved his PhD in Tourism at the University of Central Lancashire, UK. Dr. Jillian M. Rickly is Associate Professor of Tourism Management and Marketing at the University of Nottingham, UK. Miroslav Rončák has more than 25 years' experience in international tourism, research and effective destination promotion. Dr. Hugues Séraphin is a Senior Lecturer in Event and Tourism Management and Programme Leader for Event Management at the University of Winchester, UK. Professor David G. Simmons is a founding member of the Department of Tourism, Sport and Society at the University of Lincoln, UK. Dr. Juerg Stettler is Deputy Dean and Head of Research of the Business School and Head of Institute of Tourism at the Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts, Switzerland. Dr. Geoff Wall is Distinguished Professor Emeritus, Department of Geography and Environmental Management, University of Waterloo, Canada.Dodds, Rachel / Butler, Richard W. -- Dodds, Rachel / Butler, Richard W. -- Wall, Geoffrey -- Rickly, Jillian M. -- Gretzel, Ulrike -- Butler, Richard W. -- Cruz, Reil G. / Legaspi, Giovanni Francis A. -- Hess, Janto S. -- Goodwin, Harold -- Nolan, Emma / Séraphin, Hugues -- Rončák, Miroslav -- Weber, Fabian / Eggli, Florian / Ohnmacht, Timo / Stettler, Jürg -- Qurashi, Jahanzeeb -- Butler, Richard W. -- Jamieson, Walter / Jamieson, Michelle -- Becken, Susanne / Simmons, David G. -- Joppe, Marion -- Dodds, Rachel / Butler, Richard W. -- Frontmatter -- Overtourism. It's time for some answers -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- 1. Introduction / 2. The enablers of overtourism / Part I: Overtourism: theoretical positioning and implications -- 3. Perspectives on the environment and overtourism / 4. Overtourism and authenticity / 5. The role of social media in creating and addressing overtourism / 6. Overtourism and the Tourism Area Life Cycle / Part II: Case studies -- 7. Boracay beach closure: the role of the government and the private sector / 8. Thailand: too popular for its own good / 9. Barcelona -- crowding out the locals: a model for tourism management? / 10. Venice: capacity and tourism / 11. Prague and the impact of low-cost airlines / 12. Lucerne and the impact of Asian group tours / 13. The Hajj: crowding and congestion problems for pilgrims and hosts / 14. Overtourism in rural settings: the Scottish highlands and islands / PART III: Challenges -- 15. Managing overtourism at the municipal/ destination level / 16. Stakeholder management: different interests and different actions / 17. The roles of policy, planning and governance in preventing and managing overtourism / 18. Conclusion / Author biographies -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- Index1 online resource (299 pages
I Wish I’d Been Diagnosed with Cancer: The Stigma of Mental Health
The author explores how stigma from having a mental health diagnosis can impact the person and those around them. Through both personal and historical contexts, the author examines the effects of social rejection on individuals, families, work opportunities, and personal relationships. There is a clear need for a shift towards a more compassionate and understanding approach to mental health. Dodds argues that open discussions can encourage people to seek help and improve treatment
Peasants and production in the medieval North-East : the evidence from Tithes, 1270-1536 /
Evidence from unused sources sheds much light on the peasant economy of the later middle ages. The peasant economy in north-east England, and indeed throughout the country as a whole, underwent many changes during the later Middle Ages, but owing to the lack of evidence it has been difficult to come to definite conclusions.This pioneering survey uses previously unexploited sources, principally from tithe data, to offer new interpretations of the patterns for change and the scope for adaptability. The author argues that the peasant economy in this region of England was profoundly affected by war in the early fourteenth century and then disease with the arrival of the Black Death in 1349, calling into question the orthodox theories of overpopulation in explaining the "crisis"of the late Middle Ages: even at its medieval peak, the population of northeast England was sparse by comparison with areas further south. Nor did the availability of land and improved living standards lead to demographic recovery in the fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries. He also shows that despite their vulnerability to crises, peasant cultivators were highly responsive to change. Far from being primitive subsistence farmers oblivious to the marketand its signals, medieval peasants in the Durham region were subtle and successful decision-makers regarding the production and marketing of their output. BEN DODDS is Lecturer in History at the University of Tallahassee.Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 10 Mar 2023).Evidence from unused sources sheds much light on the peasant economy of the later middle ages. The peasant economy in north-east England, and indeed throughout the country as a whole, underwent many changes during the later Middle Ages, but owing to the lack of evidence it has been difficult to come to definite conclusions.This pioneering survey uses previously unexploited sources, principally from tithe data, to offer new interpretations of the patterns for change and the scope for adaptability. The author argues that the peasant economy in this region of England was profoundly affected by war in the early fourteenth century and then disease with the arrival of the Black Death in 1349, calling into question the orthodox theories of overpopulation in explaining the "crisis"of the late Middle Ages: even at its medieval peak, the population of northeast England was sparse by comparison with areas further south. Nor did the availability of land and improved living standards lead to demographic recovery in the fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries. He also shows that despite their vulnerability to crises, peasant cultivators were highly responsive to change. Far from being primitive subsistence farmers oblivious to the marketand its signals, medieval peasants in the Durham region were subtle and successful decision-makers regarding the production and marketing of their output. BEN DODDS is Lecturer in History at the University of Tallahassee
Hiram Martin Chittenden: His Public Career
The life of Hiram Martin Chittenden illustrates the work of one of the most influential federal agencies that has shaped the American West—the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. As a member of the Corps Chittenden was assigned to Yellowstone Park, where he completed the plan for tourist roads. His work there convinced powerful congressmen to increase greatly the appropriations for the park.
In this well-researched biography, Mr. Dodds shows that Chittenden was, in addition to his Corps duties, one of the first advocates of multiple-purpose resource use, a champion of scientific accuracy in forming conservation policies, the first president of the Seattle Port Commission, and the author of several books, including his monumental History of the American Fur Trade and a guidebook to Yellowstone Park that is still in print.
Gordon B. Dodds is professor of history at Portland State University.https://uknowledge.uky.edu/upk_civil_and_environmental_engineering/1000/thumbnail.jp
Advance Australia fair [music] /
New ed. For chorus (SATB); Issued as a postcard.; "Commonwealth anthem and patriotic song".; "Performed by the massed bands at the Naming of the Federal Capital Celebrations, Canberra".; "The author of this song ... is indebted to the late Professor Stuart Blackie, of Edinburgh for improvement in last verse".; 3rd verse begins: 'Beneath our radiant Southern Cross ...'; Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.mus-an6397900; MUS: N, A, N/A, B, C, JAF.Advance Australia fair. Chorus scor
Maurey-Rosenthal factorization for p-Summing operators and Dodds-Fremlin domination
We characterize by means of a vector norm inequality the space of operators that factorize through a p-summing operator from anLr-space to an Ls-space. As an application, we prove a domination result in the sense of Dodds-Fremlin for p-summing operators on Banach lattices with cotype 2, showing moreover that this cannot hold in general for spaces with higher cotype. We also present a new characterization of Banach lattices satisfying a lower 2-estimate in terms of the order properties of 2-summing operators. © by THETA, 2012.First author partially supported by Spanish grants MTM2008-01366, I-MATH and CCG08- UCM / ESP-4394. Second author supported by the Ministerio de Educacion y Ciencia, under project MTM2009-14483-C02-02 (Spain), and FEDER. Third author partially supported by Spanish MICINN through Juan de la Cierva program and grant MTM2008-02652, Santander/Complutense PR34/07-15837 and Generalitat Valenciana grant Prometeo/2008/101.Palazuelos, C.; Sánchez Pérez, EA.; Tradacete Pérez, P. (2012). Maurey-Rosenthal factorization for p-Summing operators and Dodds-Fremlin domination. Journal of Operator Theory. 68(1):205-222. https://riunet.upv.es/handle/10251/56997S20522268
Advance Australia fair [music] /
New ed. For chorus (SATB); Caption title.; Issued as a postcard.; "Patriotic song".; "Under Govt. Patronage, N.S.W. & League of the Empire, London. Sung by the Great Choir of 10,000 voices at Commonwealth celebrations ..."; "The words of this patriotic song have been revised. The author, Mr P.D. McCormick ("Amicus"), is indebted to the late Professor Stuart Blackie, of Edinburgh, for improvement in the last verse".; "'Advance Australia Fair' is now our national anthem"-the Premier, May, 1907".; Postcard has stamp dated 5 Feb 1909.; Condition: Fold across centre.; Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.mus-vn4193652.Advance Australia fair. Chorus scor
Life in Data”—Outcome of a Multi-Disciplinary, Interactive Biobanking Conference Session on Sample Data
©Sara Y. Nussbeck et al. 2016; Published by Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. This Open Access article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) which permits any noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and the source are credited. The article attached is the publisher's pdf.NHM Repositor
- …
