11,062 research outputs found
'Merging' the Aboriginal population: welfare, justice, power and the separation of Aboriginal children in Victoria
This paper sets out some of the parameters of social intervention in the family in Australia around the turn of the 20th century in ways which permit interventions in Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal populations to be broadly compared and contrasted. It focuses on forms of intervention underpinned by the kind of liberal political reasoning that allowed administrators to intervene on the basis of assessments of the capacity of families to govern themselves (Hindess 2000, 2001). The paper draws on archival material in Victoria, and the evidence of interventions in Aboriginal populations focuses on the removal of Aboriginal children from their communities in various parts of the state during this period. 'Race' comes to be constructed in terms that allow legislators and administrators to make discriminations within Aboriginal populations in order to manage them
Volterra Centennial Meetings - Invited talks given by Christopher Baker at Arlington & Tempe
June 1996 saw two meetings to mark the centennial of the mathematical work of Vito Volterra, the first being held at the University of Texas at Arlington (organised by Professors Corduneanu and Kanner) and the second at the State University of Arizona at Tempe. In invited talks at each meeting, the first-named author presented joint work that follows, in chronological sequence, in this technical report. Christopher T H Baker & Arslang Tang 2 GENERALIZED HALANAY INEQUALITIES FOR VOLTERRA FUNCTIONAL DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS AND DISCRETIZED VERSIONS CHRISTOPHER T.H. BAKER 1 & ARSALANG TANG 2 Department of Pure and Applied Mathematics, The Victoria University of Manchester, England Abstract. Halanay's inequality provides a decreasing bound on a function satisfying a delay-differential inequality, subject to certain conditions, and it has been used by Halanay to analyze asymptotic stability of the zero solution of a certain delay-differential equations with fixed lag. The original ineq..
Victoria University Student Attrition Report: Comprehensive Analysis and Recommendations
Punishing welfare : genealogies of child abuse
Official statistics on child protection in Australia suggest that child abuse is at crisis levels, providing a context for the most recent legislative and regulatory changes in child protection in Victoria; these promote community-managed services, voluntary care agreements, informal legal processes and fast-tracking of child
intervention. This article sets out the rudiments of a genealogical account of the category of child abuse, placing the present events in the context of historical shifts in how the problem of child abuse is conceived and acted upon. It draws attention to new forms of power in relation to the policing of children and families, and their corresponding modes of subjectification that seek to fabricate individual responsibility for the underlying social arrangements surrounding children and families
Evapotranspiration Landfill Cover at Wollert, Victoria
Difficulties associated with the construction and maintenance of conventional landfill barrier caps has prompted a number of alternative capping solutions. One particular example is an evapotranspiration (ET) landfill cap. These covers rely on the manipulation of water balance components rather than a barrier approach in order to minimise the infiltration of water into the landfill. The overall ET cover design philosophy and process is significantly different from that employed in the construction of conventional covers.
Currently Hanson Australia, in collaboration with Melbourne University, is working through the design and research of an ET cover at Wollert landfill in Victoria. This paper presents the background and objectives of the project, a summary of the progress to date and intended future research. An insight is given into cover material and plant selection and required field, laboratory and glasshouse trials.Full Tex
African American Storyteller, Victoria A. Casey McDonald
In the deep resonance of storyteller Victoria A. Casey McDonald’s voice, you will hear her tell stories about growing up in Western North Carolina, and the kind of Christmas she had as a child. The late Victoria was our friend, a CSA board member, author, and “Stories of Mountain Folk” interviewer
Book review: demolish or dare to dream: rethinking the value of architecture in our cities
Karl Baker considers this unique book on contemporary issues in architecture and urbanism, centring on The Corviale Void project: a one kilometre long strip of urban space, immured in the notorious Corviale housing development in southwest Rome. Author Victoria Watson opens questions about the role of the aesthetic and the monumental in the city, challenging materialist and economically rationalist ideas of city making. Utopian Adventure: The Corviale Void. Victoria Watson. Ashgate. January 2012. 117 pages
Art Forum - Lynn, Victoria
4 September 2002. -- Victoria Lynn is a distinguished curator and writer who has worked in the field of contemporary and Australian visual arts over the last two decades. She has recently been appointed Director of Creative Development at the Australian Centre for the Moving Image, an innovative exhibition venue located at Federation Square in Melbourne, due to open later this year. She is currently Chair of the Visual Arts/Crafts Board of the Australia Council. From 1991 to 2001 she was Curator of Contemporary Art at the Art Gallery of New South Wales, and the numerous exhibitions she has curated have received substantial critical acclaim. She is the author of many articles, catalogue essays and edited collections, and books on artists Marion Borgelt and Eugene Carchesio. In her lecture she will discuss both Australian and International work, the challenges at the Australian Centre for the Moving Image, and the different modes and understandings of what the moving image can and might be understood as
Medals in hand, Bob Morrow, USA, (centre), his team mate T. Baker on the right and Hec Hogan of Australia on the left after the men's 100 metres final at the Olympic Games, Melbourne Cricket Ground, Victoria,1956 [picture] /
Title devised by cataloguer from typed label on verso.; Part of the collection: Olympic Games, Melbourne, Victoria 1956.; Inscriptions: "Medals in hand, Bob Morrow USA (centre) and his team mate T. Baker on the right. Hec Hogan of Australia on the left, MCG"--Typed label on verso.; Also available in electronic version via the Internet at: http//nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn4278496-s97; Donated through the Australian Government's Cultural Gifts Program by Bruce Howard, 2007
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